The ember-routable-modal
addon allows you to quickly and easily implement URL-first modals, similar to those found on sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and Dribbble. You can navigate to modals elsewhere in the route tree without losing your place on the current page, making it ideal for lightboxes and photo viewers.
ember install ember-routable-modal
Ember.js 2.12+ is required.
You must add {{routable-modal-outlet}}
to the bottom of your application template in order for modals to render.
The addon comes with a lightweight default Sass stylesheet. To use it, you must first install ember-cli-sass, then import the files at the top of your styles/app.scss
file as so;
@import "ember-routable-modal/core";
@import "ember-routable-modal/dialog";
You can use the modal-route
generator to quickly scaffold modal routes, sharing the syntax of the built-in route
generator. Try running the following command;
ember generate modal-route example
If you are using the pod structure, make sure you pass the -p
parameter.
You will now see that a route has been generated with the provided mixin, as well as a template with a sample dialog element.
// app/routes/example.js
import Ember from 'ember';
import ModalRouteMixin from 'ember-routable-modal/mixins/route';
export default Ember.Route.extend(ModalRouteMixin, {
});
Now whenever you navigate to /example
, through the usual {{link-to}}
helper or by calling this.transitionTo()
within a route, the example
modal will render on top of your currently active route. If you load the page from the /example
URL directly, the closest parent route will be rendered underneath the modal.
You are free to delete the provided template and build your own dialog component if you wish, the addon is flexible.
Modal routes also work with the loading substate when an asynchronous object is passed to the route's model
hook. Just create a template with the filename in the format {route}-loading
, and it will be rendered on top of the modal backdrop while your model
hook waits to resolve.
You can close modals in one of two ways;
The addon comes with a service called current-routed-modal
. Simply inject it wherever you would like to be able to control the modal, for instance in a component;
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Component.extend({
modal: Ember.inject.service('current-routed-modal'),
tagName: 'button',
click() {
this.get('modal').close();
}
});
You can also use the {{routable-modal-close-button}}
component, which has the same implementation as the code sample above. You can see an example of it used in the auto-generated modal route template. It can also be used in block form, such as {{#routable-modal-close-button}}Close{{/routable-modal-close-button}}
You can override the default modal element classes by setting the ENV['ember-routable-modal']
option in config/environment.js
like so;
ENV['ember-routable-modal'] = {
modalClassNames: ['modal'],
backdropClassNames: ['modal-backdrop'],
modalOpenBodyClassName: 'modal-open'
};
Property | Default |
---|---|
modalClassNames |
['routable-modal'] |
backdropClassNames |
['routable-modal--backdrop'] |
modalOpenBodyClassName |
routable-modal--open |
ember test
– Runs the test suite on the current Ember versionember test --server
– Runs the test suite in "watch mode"npm test
– Runsember try:each
to test your addon against multiple Ember versions