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Manage session history with JavaScript

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history Travis npm package

history is a JavaScript library that lets you easily manage session history anywhere JavaScript runs. history abstracts away the differences in various environments and provides a minimal API that lets you manage the history stack, navigate, confirm navigation, and persist state between sessions.

Installation

Using npm:

$ npm install --save history

Then with a module bundler like webpack, use as you would anything else:

// using ES6 modules
import createHistory from 'history/createBrowserHistory'

// using CommonJS modules
var createHistory = require('history').createBrowserHistory

The UMD build is also available on unpkg:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/history/umd/history.min.js"></script>

You can find the library on window.History.

Usage

history provides 3 different methods for creating a history object, depending on your environment.

  • createBrowserHistory is for use in modern web browsers that support the HTML5 history API (see cross-browser compatibility)
  • createMemoryHistory is used as a reference implementation and may also be used in non-DOM environments, like React Native
  • createHashHistory is for use in legacy web browsers

Depending on the method you want to use to keep track of history, you'll import (or require) one of these methods directly from the package root (i.e. history/createBrowserHistory). The remainder of this document uses the term createHistory to refer to any of these implementations.

Basic usage looks like this:

import createHistory from 'history/createBrowserHistory'

const history = createHistory()

// Get the current location.
const location = history.location

// Listen for changes to the current location.
const unlisten = history.listen((location, action) => {
  // location is an object like window.location
  console.log(action, location.pathname, location.state)
})

// Use push, replace, and go to navigate around.
history.push('/home', { some: 'state' })

// To stop listening, call the function returned from listen().
unlisten()

The options that each create method takes, along with its default values, are:

createBrowserHistory({
  basename: '',             // The base URL of the app (see below)
  forceRefresh: false,      // Set true to force full page refreshes
  keyLength: 6,             // The length of location.key
  // A function to use to confirm navigation with the user (see below)
  getUserConfirmation: (message, callback) => callback(window.confirm(message))
})

createMemoryHistory({
  initialEntries: [ '/' ],  // The initial URLs in the history stack
  initialIndex: 0,          // The starting index in the history stack
  keyLength: 6,             // The length of location.key
  // A function to use to confirm navigation with the user. Required
  // if you return string prompts from transition hooks (see below)
  getUserConfirmation: null
})

createHashHistory({
  basename: '',             // The base URL of the app (see below)
  hashType: 'slash',        // The hash type to use (see below)
  // A function to use to confirm navigation with the user (see below)
  getUserConfirmation: (message, callback) => callback(window.confirm(message))
})

Properties

Each history object has the following properties:

  • history.length - The number of entries in the history stack
  • history.location - The current location (see below)
  • history.action - The current navigation action (see below)

Additionally, createMemoryHistory provides history.index and history.entries properties that let you inspect the history stack.

Listening

You can listen for changes to the current location using history.listen:

history.listen((location, action) => {
  console.log(`The current URL is ${location.pathname}${location.search}${location.hash}`)
  console.log(`The last navigation action was ${action}`)
})

The location object implements a subset of the window.location interface, including:

  • location.pathname - The path of the URL
  • location.search - The URL query string
  • location.hash - The URL hash fragment

Locations may also have the following properties:

  • location.state - Some extra state for this location that does not reside in the URL (supported in createBrowserHistory and createMemoryHistory)
  • location.key - A unique string representing this location (supported in createBrowserHistory and createMemoryHistory)

The action is one of PUSH, REPLACE, or POP depending on how the user got to the current URL.

Navigation

history objects may be used programmatically change the current location using the following methods:

  • history.push(path, [state])
  • history.replace(path, [state])
  • history.go(n)
  • history.goBack()
  • history.goForward()
  • history.canGo(n) (only in createMemoryHistory)

When using push or replace you can either specify both the URL path and state as separate arguments or include everything in a single location-like object as the first argument.

  1. A URL path or
  2. A location-like object with { pathname, search, hash, state }
// Push a new entry onto the history stack.
history.push('/home')

// Push a new entry onto the history stack with a query string
// and some state. Location state does not appear in the URL.
history.push('/home?the=query', { some: 'state' })

// If you prefer, use a single location-like object to specify both
// the URL and state. This is equivalent to the example above.
history.push({
  pathname: '/home',
  search: '?the=query',
  state: { some: 'state' }
})

// Go back to the previous history entry. The following
// two lines are synonymous.
history.go(-1)
history.goBack()

Note: Location state is only supported in createBrowserHistory and createMemoryHistory.

Blocking Transitions

history lets you register a prompt message that will be shown to the user before location listeners are notified. This allows you to make sure the user wants to leave the current page before they navigate away.

// Register a simple prompt message that will be shown the
// user before they navigate away from the current page.
const unblock = history.block('Are you sure you want to leave this page?')

// Or use a function that returns the message when it's needed.
history.block((location, action) => {
  // The location and action arguments indicate the location
  // we're transitioning to and how we're getting there.

  // A common use case is to prevent the user from leaving the
  // page if there's a form they haven't submitted yet.
  if (input.value !== '')
    return 'Are you sure you want to leave this page?'
})

// To stop blocking transitions, call the function returned from block().
unblock()

Note: You'll need to provide a getUserConfirmation function to use this feature with createMemoryHistory (see below).

Customizing the Confirm Dialog

By default, window.confirm is used to show prompt messages to the user. If you need to override this behavior (or if you're using createMemoryHistory, which doesn't assume a DOM environment), provide a getUserConfirmation function when you create your history object.

const history = createHistory({
  getUserConfirmation(message, callback) {
    // Show some custom dialog to the user and call
    // callback(true) to continue the transiton, or
    // callback(false) to abort it.
  }
})

Using a Base URL

If all the URLs in your app are relative to some other "base" URL, use the basename option. This option transparently adds the given string to the front of all URLs you use.

const history = createHistory({
  basename: '/the/base'
})

history.listen(location => {
  console.log(location.pathname) // /home
})

history.push('/home') // URL is now /the/base/home

Note: basename is not suppported in createMemoryHistory.

Forcing Full Page Refreshes in createBrowserHistory

By default createBrowserHistory uses HTML5 pushState and replaceState to prevent reloading the entire page from the server while navigating around. If instead you would like to reload as the URL changes, use the forceRefresh option.

const history = createBrowserHistory({
  forceRefresh: true
})

Modifying the Hash Type in createHashHistory

By default createHashHistory uses a leading slash in hash-based URLs. You can use the hashType option to use a different hash formatting.

const history = createHashHistory({
  hashType: 'slash' // the default
})

history.push('/home') // window.location.hash is #/home

const history = createHashHistory({
  hashType: 'noslash' // Omit the leading slash
})

history.push('/home') // window.location.hash is #home

const history = createHashHistory({
  hashType: 'hashbang' // Google's legacy AJAX URL format
})

history.push('/home') // window.location.hash is #!/home

Thanks

A big thank-you to Dan Shaw for letting us use the history npm package name! Thanks Dan!

Also, thanks to BrowserStack for providing the infrastructure that allows us to run our build in real browsers.

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