Simplify your Angular applications navigation by defining menu entries directly at the route itself. It is fully typed and defined by your requirements, build as many navigation's as you like. It also supports nesting menus so you can build yourself cool dropdowns. All menus are build and injected into several injection tokens, so you can import them anywhere.
pnpm add angular-router-menus
Tip
Zero dependencies and no performance bottleneck!
- Install the package
- Create a type definition file or add to yours
declare type Menus = "main" | "aside"
- Adjust these menus by your needs
- In your
main.ts
file import and configure the library - You must need a preloading strategy because I use internal api's which require some providers
NoPreloading
is the default in Angular
- Add a
menu
property to each Angular route where you want it to appear in the default menu - Use the
menu.in
property to define in which menu the route should appear - Configure even more!
void bootstrapApplication(AppComponent, {
providers: [
provideRouter(routes, withPreloading(NoPreloading)),
provideRouterMenus(routes, ["main"], {
defaultMenu: "main", // 👋🏻
debug: !environment.production,
}),
],
}).catch((error) => {
console.error(error);
});
export const routes = [
{
path: "home",
title: "Home",
loadComponent: /* ... */,
menu: {
in: "main",
},
}
] satisfies Routes
For details on menu items configuration, please take a look at the interfaces and its documentation here: projects/angular-router-menus/src/lib/menu.ts
Property | Description |
---|---|
defaultMenu |
If not defined via in this is the default menu. |
debug |
Enables debugging, because of internal API use I omit all errors. |
menuOptions |
Object of menu name and an object. Please see MenuOptions. |
Define options for a specific menu.
Property | Description |
---|---|
sortOrder |
Sort menu by "asc" or "desc". |
Property | Description |
---|---|
in |
In which menu this item appears. |
priority |
At which priority this item should appear in the menu. |
label |
Optional label. Default: route.title . |
href |
Change default route url to something else. For example to redirect to an external site. This also works on component pages. |
icon.name |
A menu item icon. |
icon.position |
Its position. Define it by yourself. |
All types by angular-router-menus
are by default very wide (e.g. string
), to use your own custom types, you can override the declarations by defining your types in e.g. a arm-types.d.ts
file.
Here is an example which also uses Angular-FontAwesome (see ./projects/app/src/icons.ts
for more) icon names for the menu item icon property so it will autocomplete in your IDE/Editor.
declare type Menus = "main" | "aside";
declare type MenuItemIcon = import("@fortawesome/fontawesome-common-types").IconName;
declare type MenuItemIconPosition = "left" | "right";
@Component({
selector: "app-root",
templateUrl: "./app.component.html",
styleUrl: "./app.component.scss",
changeDetection: ChangeDetectionStrategy.OnPush,
imports: [RouterOutlet, RouterLink, RouterLinkActive],
})
export class AppComponent {
readonly menu = inject(RouterMenusService).use("main"); // 👋🏻
}
<ul>
@for (item of menu(); track item.href) {
<li>
<a [routerLink]="item.href" routerLinkActive="active">{{ item.label }}</a>
@if (item.icon) {
<fa-icon [icon]="item.icon.name" />
}
</li>
} @empty {
<span>Loading...</span>
}
</ul>
For a full example project go to projects/app/
and run it ;), it uses:
- Angular FontAwesome
- Tailwind
- Most of the lib's options
- Zoneless
You can use a if-clause and pipe to check for the href to start with "http" or use some lib to check against it. In later Angular version you can also directly call "...".startsWith("http")
.