That's cool, but you might want to look at these pages first:
Freeway support is discontinued.
Freeway adds routes (a common web application concept) to EE. You set the routes in your Freeway settings like so, and just separate them with linebreaks:
journals/{{user}} => blogs/users/{{user}}
If you set a route like this, visitors should be able to visit "journals/admin", but their request will be interpreted by EE as "blogs/users/admin/". EE will load the blogs template group and the user template. Segments one, two, and three will be blogs, users, and admin. Additionally, "admin" will be available in the template as {freeway_user}
. So, that's fun.
See Issue #1. Routes are a valuable concept because they separate your URLs from your data. They make more sense in an MVC application, but in EE, they provide added power and flexibility around your URLs.
-
Install Freeway in your third_party folder
-
Enable it on the Addon -> Extensions page
-
Set routes on the extension settings page. A route looks like this:
/blog/{{username}}/{{category}} => /blog/category/{{category}}
In this case, a URL like "blog/davery/css" will be treated, in EE, as "blog/category/css". Several variables will be available in the template:
{freeway_username} - davery {freeway_category} - css {freeway_1} - blog {freeway_2} - davery {freeway_3} - css {freeway_4+} - (blank) {freeway_info} - debug info from Freeway
-
Template variables:
{freeway_[varname]}
- the value of{{varname}}
in the URL match{freeway_1}
,{freeway_2}
- "original" segments, the one you see in your browser bar{segment_1}
,{segment_2}
- "parsed" segments, the ones EE is sent{freeway_info}
- debug info from Freeway
Installed Freeway, but still don't get it? Try the following settings:
journals => blogs/
journals/{{user}} => blogs/users/{{user}}
product/{{product_id}}/{{action}} => catalog/product_lookup/id/{{product_id}}/{{action}}
Then, set the following code in your index template:
<p>EE parses the current URI as:
<strong>
/ {segment_1}
{if segment_2}/ {segment_2}{/if}
{if segment_3}/ {segment_3}{/if}
{if segment_4}/ {segment_4}{/if}
{if segment_5}/ {segment_5}{/if}
{if segment_6}/ {segment_6}{/if}
</strong>
</p>
<p>The original URI has been stored:
<strong>
/ {freeway_1}
{if freeway_2}/ {freeway_2}{/if}
{if freeway_3}/ {freeway_3}{/if}
{if freeway_4}/ {freeway_4}{/if}
{if freeway_5}/ {freeway_5}{/if}
{if freeway_6}/ {freeway_6}{/if}
</strong>
</p>
<p>And some variables have been saved:<br>
<strong>
freeway_user: {freeway_user}<br>
freeway_product_id: {freeway_product_id}<br>
freeway_action: {freeway_action}
</strong>
</p>
<p>
<a href="/product/42423423/buy/" target="_blank">/product/42423423/buy/</a><br>
<a href="/journals/" target="_blank">/journals</a><br>
<a href="/journals/jimmy/" target="_blank">/journals/jimmy</a><br>
</p>
<hr>
{freeway_info}
You should be able to click around and watch the segments and variables update.
- Route partial segments through, like /foo{{bar}}/ => /category-{{bar}}/
- Run common queries like category_id on tokens before passing them on to new ones (example: {{category from=cat_name to=cat_id}} would take the cat name, but return te id