/** * @coreapi * @module params */ /** for typedoc */ import { ParamType } from "./paramType"; /** * Parameter values * * An object containing state parameter key/value pairs * * #### Example: * ```js * { * userId: 353474, * folderId: 'inbox' * } * ``` * * @coreapi */ export interface RawParams { [key: string]: any; } /** @internalapi */ export declare type ParamsOrArray = (RawParams | RawParams[]); /** * Configuration for a single Parameter * * In a [[StateDeclaration.params]], each `ParamDeclaration` * defines how a single State Parameter should work. * * #### Example: * ```js * var mystate = { * template: '
', * controller: function() {} * url: '/mystate/:start?{count:int}', * params: { * start: { // <-- ParamDeclaration for `start` * type: 'date', * value: new Date(), // <-- Default value * squash: true, * }, * * nonUrlParam: { // <-- ParamDeclaration for 'nonUrlParam' * type: "int", * array: true, * value: [] * }, * * count: 0, // <-- Default value for 'param1' * // (shorthand ParamDeclaration.value) * } * } * ``` * @coreapi */ export interface ParamDeclaration { /** * The default value for this parameter. * * Specifies the default value for this parameter. * This implicitly sets this parameter as optional. * * When UI-Router routes to a state and no value is specified for this parameter in the URL or transition, * the default value will be used instead. * If value is a function, it will be injected and invoked, and the return value used. * * Note: `value: undefined` is treated as though **no default value was specified**, while `value: null` is treated * as **"the default value is null"**. * * ``` * // define default values for param1 and param2 * params: { * param1: { * value: "defaultValue" * }, * param2: { * value: "param2Default; * } * } * ``` * * ### Shorthand Declaration * * If you only want to set the default value of the parameter, you may use a shorthand syntax. * In the params map, instead mapping the param name to a full parameter configuration object, simply set map it * to the default parameter value, e.g.: * ``` * // Normal (non-shorthand) default value syntax * params: { * param1: { * value: "defaultValue" * }, * param2: { * value: "param2Default" * } * } * * // Shorthand default value syntax * params: { * param1: "defaultValue", * param2: "param2Default" * } * ``` * * This defines a default value for the parameter. * If a parameter value is `undefined`, this default value will be used instead * * --- * * Default: `undefined` */ value?: any; /** * The parameter's type * * Specifies the [[ParamType]] of the parameter. * Parameter types can be used to customize the encoding/decoding of parameter values. * * Set this property to the name of parameter's type. * The type may be either one of the built in types, or a custom type that has been registered with the [[UrlMatcherFactory]]. * * See [[ParamTypes]] for the list of built in types. * * --- * * Default: * - Path parameters (`/:fooParam`): `path` * - Query parameters (`?queryParam`): `query` * - Non-url parameters (`param: { foo: null }`): `any` * */ type: (string | ParamType); /** * The parameter's `array` mode * * Explicitly specifies the array mode of a URL parameter * * - If `false`, the parameter value will be treated (encoded/decoded) as a single value * - If `true`, the parameter value will be treated (encoded/decoded) as an array of values. * - If `auto` (for query parameters only), if multiple values for a single parameter are present * in the URL (e.g.: /foo?bar=1&bar=2&bar=3) then the values are mapped to an array (e.g.: * `{ foo: [ '1', '2', '3' ] }`). However, if only one value is present (e.g.: /foo?bar=1) * then the value is treated as single value (e.g.: { foo: '1' }). * * If you specified a [[type]] for the parameter, the value will be treated as an array * of the specified [[ParamType]]. * * #### Example: * ```js * { * name: 'foo', * url: '/foo/{arrayParam:int}`, * params: { * arrayParam: { array: true } * } * } * * // After the transition, URL should be '/foo/1-2-3' * $state.go("foo", { arrayParam: [ 1, 2, 3 ] }); * ``` * * @default `false` for path parameters, such as `url: '/foo/:pathParam'` * @default `auto` for query parameters, such as `url: '/foo?queryParam'` * @default `true` if the parameter name ends in `[]`, such as `url: '/foo/{implicitArrayParam:int[]}'` */ array: boolean; /** * Squash mode: omit default parameter values in URL * * Configures how a default parameter value is represented in the URL when the current parameter value * is the same as the default value. * * There are three squash settings: * * - `false`: The parameter's default value is not squashed. It is encoded and included in the URL * - `true`: The parameter's default value is omitted from the URL. * If the parameter is preceeded and followed by slashes in the state's url declaration, then one of those slashes are omitted. * This can allow for cleaner looking URLs. * - `"<arbitrary string>"`: The parameter's default value is replaced with an arbitrary * placeholder of your choice. * * #### Example: * ```js * { * name: 'mystate', * url: '/mystate/:myparam', * params: { * myparam: 'defaultParamValue' * squash: true * } * } * * // URL will be `/mystate/` * $state.go('mystate', { myparam: 'defaultParamValue' }); * * // URL will be `/mystate/someOtherValue` * $state.go('mystate', { myparam: 'someOtherValue' }); * ``` * * #### Example: * ```js * { * name: 'mystate2', * url: '/mystate2/:myparam2', * params: { * myparam2: 'defaultParamValue' * squash: "~" * } * } * * // URL will be `/mystate/~` * $state.go('mystate', { myparam2: 'defaultParamValue' }); * * // URL will be `/mystate/someOtherValue` * $state.go('mystate', { myparam2: 'someOtherValue' }); * ``` * * Default: If squash is not set, it uses the configured default squash policy. (See [[defaultSquashPolicy]]()) */ squash: (boolean | string); /** * @internalapi * * An array of [[Replace]] objects. * * When creating a Transition, defines how to handle certain special values, such as `undefined`, `null`, * or empty string `""`. If the transition is started, and the parameter value is equal to one of the "to" * values, then the parameter value is replaced with the "from" value. * * #### Example: * ```js * replace: [ * { from: undefined, to: null }, * { from: "", to: null } * ] * ``` */ replace: Replace[]; /** * @hidden * @internalapi * * This is not part of the declaration; it is a calculated value depending on if a default value was specified or not. */ isOptional: boolean; /** * Dynamic flag * * When `dynamic` is `true`, changes to the parameter value will not cause the state to be entered/exited. * The resolves will not be re-fetched, nor will views be reloaded. * * Normally, if a parameter value changes, the state which declared that the parameter will be reloaded (entered/exited). * When a parameter is `dynamic`, a transition still occurs, but it does not cause the state to exit/enter. * * This can be useful to build UI where the component updates itself when the param values change. * A common scenario where this is useful is searching/paging/sorting. * * --- * * Note: this value overrides the `dynamic` value on a custom parameter type ([[ParamTypeDefinition.dynamic]]). * * --- * * Default: `false` */ dynamic: boolean; /** * Disables url-encoding of parameter values * * When `true`, parameter values are not url-encoded. * This is commonly used to allow "slug" urls, with a parameter value including non-semantic slashes. * * #### Example: * ```js * url: '/product/:slug', * params: { * slug: { type: 'string', raw: true } * } * ``` * * This allows a URL parameter of `{ slug: 'camping/tents/awesome_tent' }` * to serialize to `/product/camping/tents/awesome_tent` * instead of `/product/camping%2Ftents%2Fawesome_tent`. * * --- * * Note: this value overrides the `raw` value on a custom parameter type ([[ParamTypeDefinition.raw]]). * * ### Decoding warning * * The decoding behavior of raw parameters is not defined. * For example, given a url template such as `/:raw1/:raw2` * the url `/foo/bar/baz/qux/`, there is no way to determine which slashes belong to which params. * * It's generally safe to use a raw parameter at the end of a path, like '/product/:slug'. * However, beware of the characters you allow in your raw parameter values. * Avoid unencoded characters that could disrupt normal URL parsing, such as `?` and `#`. * * --- * * Default: `false` */ raw: boolean; /** * Enables/disables inheriting of this parameter's value * * When a transition is run with [[TransitionOptions.inherit]] set to * `true`, the current param values are inherited in the new transition. * However, parameters values which have `inherit: false` set will *not be inherited*. * * #### Example state : * ```js * var fooState = { * name: 'foo', * url: '/:fooId?mode&refresh', * params: { * refresh: { inherit: false } * } * } * * // Set fooId to 123 * $state.go('fooState', { fooId: 1234, mode: 'list', refresh: true }); * ``` * * In the component: * `mode: 'list' is inherited, but refresh: true is not inherited. * // The param values are thus: `{ fooId: 4567, mode: 'list' }` * ``` *