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Custom routing | In Nuxt 3, your routing is defined by the structure of your files inside the pages directory. However, since it uses vue-router under the hood, Nuxt offers you several ways to add custom routes in your project. |
Adding custom routes
In Nuxt 3, your routing is defined by the structure of your files inside the pages directory. However, since it uses vue-router under the hood, Nuxt offers you several ways to add custom routes in your project.
Using router config
Using router options, you can optionally override or extend your routes using a function that accepts the scanned routes and returns customized routes.
If it returns null
or undefined
, Nuxt will fall back to the default routes (useful to modify input array).
import type { RouterConfig } from '@nuxt/schema'
// https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/routeroptions.html
export default <RouterConfig> {
routes: (_routes) => [
{
name: 'home',
path: '/',
component: () => import('~/pages/home.vue').then(r => r.default || r)
}
],
}
::alert
Nuxt will not augment any new routes you return from the routes
function with metadata defined in definePageMeta
of the component you provide. If you want that to happen, you should use the pages:extend
hook which is called at build-time.
::
Using the pages:extend
hook
You can add, change or remove pages from the scanned routes with the pages:extend
nuxt hook. For example, to prevent creating routes for any .ts
files:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
hooks: {
'pages:extend' (pages) {
// add a route
pages.push({
name: 'profile',
path: '/profile',
file: '~/extra-pages/profile.vue'
})
// remove routes
function removePagesMatching (pattern: RegExp, pages: NuxtPage[] = []) {
const pagesToRemove = []
for (const page of pages) {
if (pattern.test(page.file)) {
pagesToRemove.push(page)
} else {
removePagesMatching(pattern, page.children)
}
}
for (const page of pagesToRemove) {
pages.splice(pages.indexOf(page), 1)
}
}
removePagesMatching(/\.ts$/, pages)
}
}
})
Using a module
If you plan to add a whole set of pages related with a specific functionality, you might want to use a Nuxt module.
The Nuxt kit provides a few ways to add routes:
- extendPages (callback: pages => void)
- extendRouteRules (route: string, rule: NitroRouteConfig, options: ExtendRouteRulesOptions)
Router Options
It is possible to customize vue-router options.
Using app/router.options
It is possible to customize vue-router options.
This is the recommended way to specify router options.
import type { RouterConfig } from '@nuxt/schema'
// https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/routeroptions.html
export default <RouterConfig> {
}
Using nuxt.config
Note: Only JSON serializable options are configurable:
linkActiveClass
linkExactActiveClass
end
sensitive
strict
hashMode
export default defineNuxtConfig({
router: {
// https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/routeroptions.html
options: {}
}
})
Hash Mode (SPA)
You can enable hash history in SPA mode. In this mode, router uses a hash character (#) before the actual URL that is internally passed. When enabled, the URL is never sent to the server and SSR is not supported.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
ssr: false,
router: {
options: {
hashMode: true
}
}
})
Custom History (advanced)
You can optionally override history mode using a function that accepts the base URL and returns the history mode. If it returns null
or undefined
, Nuxt will fallback to the default history.
import type { RouterConfig } from '@nuxt/schema'
import { createMemoryHistory } from 'vue-router'
// https://router.vuejs.org/api/interfaces/routeroptions.html
export default <RouterConfig> {
history: base => import.meta.client ? createMemoryHistory(base) : null /* default */
}