Defining routes by using predefined paths is not always enough for complex applications. In Next.js you can add brackets to a page ([param]
) to create a dynamic route (a.k.a. url slugs, pretty urls, and others).
Consider the following page pages/post/[pid].js
:
import { useRouter } from 'next/router'
const Post = () => {
const router = useRouter()
const { pid } = router.query
return <p>Post: {pid}</p>
}
export default Post
Any route like /post/1
, /post/abc
, etc. will be matched by pages/post/[pid].js
. The matched path parameter will be sent as a query parameter to the page, and it will be merged with the other query parameters.
For example, the route /post/abc
will have the following query
object:
{ "pid": "abc" }
Similarly, the route /post/abc?foo=bar
will have the following query
object:
{ "foo": "bar", "pid": "abc" }
However, route parameters will override query parameters with the same name. For example, the route /post/abc?pid=123
will have the following query
object:
{ "pid": "abc" }
Multiple dynamic route segments work the same way. The page pages/post/[pid]/[comment].js
will match the route /post/abc/a-comment
and its query
object will be:
{ "pid": "abc", "comment": "a-comment" }
Note: Client-side navigations to a dynamic route (including catch all routes) can be handled with next/link
. Read our docs for Linking between pages to learn more.
Dynamic routes can be extended to catch all paths by adding three dots (...
) inside the brackets. For example:
pages/post/[...slug].js
matches /post/a
, but also /post/a/b
, /post/a/b/c
and so on.Note: You can use names other than
slug
, such as:[...param]
Matched parameters will be sent as a query parameter (slug
in the example) to the page, and it will always be an array, so, the path /post/a
will have the following query
object:
{ "slug": ["a"] }
And in the case of /post/a/b
, and any other matching path, new parameters will be added to the array, like so:
{ "slug": ["a", "b"] }
Catch all routes can be made optional by including the parameter in double brackets ([[...slug]]
).
For example, pages/post/[[...slug]].js
will match /post
, /post/a
, /post/a/b
, and so on.
The main difference between catch all and optional catch all routes is that with optional, the route without the parameter is also matched (/post
in the example above).
The query
objects are as follows:
{ } // GET `/post` (empty object)
{ "slug": ["a"] } // `GET /post/a` (single-element array)
{ "slug": ["a", "b"] } // `GET /post/a/b` (multi-element array)
A good example of optional catch all routes is the Next.js docs, a single page called pages/docs/[[...slug]].js takes care of all the docs you're currently looking at.
Predefined routes take precedence over dynamic routes, and dynamic routes over catch all routes. Take a look at the following examples:
pages/post/create.js
- Will match /post/create
pages/post/[pid].js
- Will match /post/1
, /post/abc
, etc. But not /post/create
pages/post/[...slug].js
- Will match /post/1/2
, /post/a/b/c
, etc. But not /post/create
, /post/abc
Pages that are statically optimized by Automatic Static Optimization will be hydrated without their route parameters provided, i.e query
will be an empty object ({}
).
After hydration, Next.js will trigger an update to your application to provide the route parameters in the query
object.