web/versioned_docs/version-0.11.8/advanced/links.md
import { Required } from '@site/src/components/Tag'
If you are using Typescript, you can use Wasp's custom Link component to create type-safe links to other pages on your site.
Link ComponentAfter you defined a route:
route TaskRoute { path: "/task/:id", to: TaskPage }
page TaskPage { ... }
You can get the benefits of type-safe links by using the Link component from @wasp/router:
import { Link } from '@wasp/router'
export const TaskList = () => {
// ...
return (
<div>
{tasks.map((task) => (
<Link
key={task.id}
to="/task/:id"
params={{ id: task.id }}>
{task.description}
</Link>
))}
</div>
)
}
You can also pass search and hash props to the Link component:
<Link
to="/task/:id"
params={{ id: task.id }}
search={{ sortBy: 'date' }}
hash="comments"
>
{task.description}
</Link>
This will result in a link like this: /task/1?sortBy=date#comments. Check out the API Reference for more details.
routes ObjectYou can also get all the pages in your app with the routes object:
import { routes } from '@wasp/router'
const linkToTask = routes.TaskRoute.build({ params: { id: 1 } })
This will result in a link like this: /task/1.
You can also pass search and hash props to the build function. Check out the API Reference for more details.
Link ComponentThe Link component accepts the following props:
to <Required />
main.wasp file.params: { [name: string]: string | number } <Required /> (if the path contains params)
/task/:id, then the params prop must be { id: 1 }. Wasp supports required and optional params.search: string[][] | Record<string, string> | string | URLSearchParams
URLSearchParams constructor.{ sortBy: 'date' } becomes ?sortBy=date.hash: string
all other props that the react-router-dom's Link component accepts
routes ObjectThe routes object contains a function for each route in your app.
export const routes = {
// RootRoute has a path like "/"
RootRoute: {
build: (options?: {
search?: string[][] | Record<string, string> | string | URLSearchParams
hash?: string
}) => // ...
},
// DetailRoute has a path like "/task/:id/:something?"
DetailRoute: {
build: (
options: {
params: { id: ParamValue; something?: ParamValue; },
search?: string[][] | Record<string, string> | string | URLSearchParams
hash?: string
}
) => // ...
}
}
The params object is required if the route contains params. The search and hash parameters are optional.
You can use the routes object like this:
import { routes } from '@wasp/router'
const linkToRoot = routes.RootRoute.build()
const linkToTask = routes.DetailRoute.build({ params: { id: 1 } })