What is history?
The history package is a JavaScript library that lets you manage session history anywhere JavaScript runs. It provides a minimal API that lets you manage the history stack, navigate, and persist state between sessions. It is commonly used in conjunction with libraries like React Router but can be used standalone as well.
What are history's main functionalities?
Manage session history
This feature allows you to create a history object and manipulate the browser's session history by pushing new entries onto the history stack.
const { createBrowserHistory } = require('history');
const history = createBrowserHistory();
history.push('/home', { some: 'state' });
Navigate programmatically
This feature enables you to navigate through the history stack programmatically, either going back or forward.
history.go(-1); // Go back one entry in the history stack
history.goForward(); // Go forward one entry in the history stack
Listen for changes to the current location
This feature allows you to listen for changes in the current location, which is useful for reacting to navigation events.
const unlisten = history.listen((location, action) => {
console.log(action, location.pathname, location.state);
});
// To stop listening
unlisten();
Persist state between sessions
This feature allows you to push state onto the history stack and access it later, which is useful for persisting information across sessions without using local storage or cookies.
history.push('/location', { user: '12345' });
// The state can be accessed later
const location = history.location;
const state = location.state; // { user: '12345' }
Other packages similar to history
react-router
React Router is a collection of navigational components that compose declaratively with your application. It provides bindings to the history library, making it easier to use with React applications. It is more feature-rich and tailored specifically for React, compared to the more general-purpose history package.
vue-router
Vue Router is the official router for Vue.js. It deeply integrates with Vue.js core to make building Single Page Applications with Vue.js a breeze. It provides similar functionalities for managing navigation and history in Vue applications, analogous to what history does for more general JavaScript applications.
reach-router
Reach Router is a small, simple router for React that borrows from the ideas of the history package. It provides easy route definition and navigation but has been officially replaced by React Router as of version 6.
navigo
Navigo is a simple vanilla JavaScript router with a similar API to history. It provides a powerful router with a small footprint that does not necessarily rely on the history API provided by the browser.
history
history
is a JavaScript library that lets you easily manage session history in browsers, testing environments, and (soon, via React Native) native devices. history
abstracts away the differences in these different platforms and provides a minimal API that lets you manage the history stack, navigate, confirm navigation, and persist state between sessions. history
is library-agnostic and may easily be included in any JavaScript project.
Docs & Help
For questions and support, please visit our channel on Reactiflux or Stack Overflow. The issue tracker is exclusively for bug reports and feature requests.
Installation
Using npm:
$ npm install history
Then with a module bundler like webpack, use as you would anything else:
import { createHistory } from 'history'
var createHistory = require('history').createHistory
The UMD build is also available on npmcdn:
<script src="https://npmcdn.com/history/umd/History.min.js"></script>
You can find the library on window.History
.
Basic Usage
A "history" encapsulates navigation between different screens in your app, and notifies listeners when the current screen changes.
import { createHistory } from 'history'
let history = createHistory()
let unlisten = history.listen(location => {
console.log(location.pathname)
})
history.pushState({ the: 'state' }, '/the/path?a=query')
unlisten()
You can find many more examples in the documentation!
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.