Two years after the release of version 1.0, I am happy to announce the major version 2.0 of Electron Router DOM! 🎉
The version was rewritten, aiming to improve the developer experience, maintainability, and type inference.
In this post, I will cover the main changes and improvements introduced in version 2.0.
Site, blog, documentation and examples
Now we have a website that has these resources to help you get the most out of the library.
In version 1.0 we only had the README of the repository on GitHub and the actual implementation in the electron-app project as an example.
Which, for many people, was not enough to understand how the library worked in a more complete and intuitive way.
Typing improvements
Now you can have a better development experience where ids and query keys are typed.
This makes development safer and more intuitive, avoiding typing errors, ensuring that you are passing the correct values
and making better use of your code editor’s intellisense.
Code rewrite
The library code has been rewritten, aiming at the improvements introduced by React Router v6.4, such as support for Data APIs,
enabling a more sophisticated and productive use of both Electron Router DOM and React Router.
Query strings
You can now use query strings more easily and pass information between the main and renderer process.
API simplification
The API has been simplified to make it easier to use and understand the library.
The createFileRoute and createURLRoute functions have been removed, you can now use the registerRoute method returned by the createElectronRouter function instead.
What was done this way before:
src/main/index.ts
const fileRoute = createFileRoute(
join(__dirname, ‘../renderer/index.html‘),
id
)
process.env.NODE_ENV === ‘development‘
? window.loadURL(devServerURL)
: window.loadFile(…fileRoute)
Now it will be done like this:
id: ‘main‘,
browserWindow: window,
htmlFile: path.join(__dirname, ‘../renderer/index.html‘),
})
You no longer need to worry about the logic of loading the development server URL or the application HTML file, Electron Router DOM will take care of it for you.
Another change is that the Route component is no longer exported from the electron-router-dom package, but rather from the react-router-dom package, making it clearer and simpler to know what to use from each library.
Conclusion
With these improvements, it was necessary to change the way you create the router. And it was necessary to update the minimum required versions of the dependencies to take full advantage of the new features introduced in React Router v6.4, causing breaking changes!
I know, breaking changes always bring discomfort and, believe me, it was not an easy decision, but it will bring greater experience and evolution to your projects.
That said, don’t worry, the migration process is very simple and you can check out the migration guide I prepared for more details:
I hope you enjoy the changes and that they make developing Electron applications with React more enjoyable and productive.
Thank you for using Electron Router DOM! 💛
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