If I understood you correctly, to achieve that you would define multiple components in your Route
. You can use it like:
// think of it outside the context of the router, if you had pluggable
// portions of your `render`, you might do it like this
<App children={{main: <Users/>, sidebar: <UsersSidebar/>}}/>
// So with the router it looks like this:
const routes = (
<Route component={App}>
<Route path="groups" components={{main: Groups, sidebar: GroupsSidebar}}/>
<Route path="users" components={{main: Users, sidebar: UsersSidebar}}>
<Route path="users/:userId" component={Profile}/>
</Route>
</Route>
)
class App extends React.Component {
render () {
const { main, sidebar } = this.props;
return (
<div>
<div className="Main">
{main}
</div>
<div className="Sidebar">
{sidebar}
</div>
</div>
)
}
}
class Users extends React.Component {
render () {
return (
<div>
{/* if at "/users/123" `children` will be <Profile> */}
{/* UsersSidebar will also get <Profile> as this.props.children,
so its a little weird, but you can decide which one wants
to continue with the nesting */}
{this.props.children}
</div>
)
}
}
Also check out the sidebar example app, should help you more.
Edit:
As per @Luiz's comment:
In the latest version of router (v3) the components are in the root of the props object
So:
const { main, sidebar } = this.props.children;
becomes:
const { main, sidebar } = this.props;
EDIT:
In the react-router v4 this can be accomplished like (as per the example provided in the new docs):
import React from 'react'
import {
BrowserRouter as Router,
Route,
Link
} from 'react-router-dom'
// Each logical "route" has two components, one for
// the sidebar and one for the main area. We want to
// render both of them in different places when the
// path matches the current URL.
const routes = [
{ path: '/',
exact: true,
sidebar: () => <div>home!</div>,
main: () => <h2>Home</h2>
},
{ path: '/bubblegum',
sidebar: () => <div>bubblegum!</div>,
main: () => <h2>Bubblegum</h2>
},
{ path: '/shoelaces',
sidebar: () => <div>shoelaces!</div>,
main: () => <h2>Shoelaces</h2>
}
]
const SidebarExample = () => (
<Router>
<div style={{ display: 'flex' }}>
<div style={{
padding: '10px',
width: '40%',
background: '#f0f0f0'
}}>
<ul style={{ listStyleType: 'none', padding: 0 }}>
<li><Link to="/">Home</Link></li>
<li><Link to="/bubblegum">Bubblegum</Link></li>
<li><Link to="/shoelaces">Shoelaces</Link></li>
</ul>
{routes.map((route, index) => (
// You can render a <Route> in as many places
// as you want in your app. It will render along
// with any other <Route>s that also match the URL.
// So, a sidebar or breadcrumbs or anything else
// that requires you to render multiple things
// in multiple places at the same URL is nothing
// more than multiple <Route>s.
<Route
key={index}
path={route.path}
exact={route.exact}
component={route.sidebar}
/>
))}
</div>
<div style={{ flex: 1, padding: '10px' }}>
{routes.map((route, index) => (
// Render more <Route>s with the same paths as
// above, but different components this time.
<Route
key={index}
path={route.path}
exact={route.exact}
component={route.main}
/>
))}
</div>
</div>
</Router>
)
export default SidebarExample
Make sure you check out the new React Router v4 docs here: https://reacttraining.com/react-router/