Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive
1.1.1
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive --version 1.1.1
NuGet\Install-Package Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive -Version 1.1.1
<PackageReference Include="Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive" Version="1.1.1" />
paket add Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive --version 1.1.1
#r "nuget: Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive, 1.1.1"
// Install Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive&version=1.1.1 // Install Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Reactive&version=1.1.1
Chinook StackNavigation and SectionsNavigation
This library provides unified cross-platform tools to perform ViewModel-based navigation using the Frame navigation model.
// Navigate to the PersonDetailsPage.
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new PersonDetailsPageViewModel());
// Navigate back.
await navigator.NavigateBack(ct);
Cornerstones
- Highly Extensible
- Everything is interface-based to easily allow more implementations.
- A single framework can't cover everything. Our architecture is designed in a way that allows you to integrate your favorites tools easily.
- UI-Independant
- Navigation abstractions are not tied to a specific UI framework.
- Having the navigation code in the ViewModel layer allows for reusing the same code for multiple platforms.
Before you start
Before getting started, you should understand the different navigators.
There are 2 types of navigators available:
IStackNavigator
- Use this if your app would use a singleFrame
.ISectionsNavigator
- Use this if you want to use multiple frames (like sections tabs) or modals. Note thatIStackNavigator
is used as a building block byISectionsNavigator
.Here is how navigation around sections and modals are related to stack navigation:
- Dimension 1: Stack Navigator
- It's linear. You can go forward or back.
- Dimension 2: Sections
- Each section is a stack navigator.
- You can have multiple sections next to each other.
- You can change the active section freely (without limitations).
- Dimension 3: Modals
- Each modal is a stack navigator.
- You can have multiple modals on top of each other.
- You can't change the modal freely; you can only open a new modal and close existing modals.
- The active modal is always the one with the highest priority (set when opening).
Axis Navigator Operations X IStackNavigator
Navigate, NavigateBack Y ISectionsNavigator
SetActiveSection Z ISectionsNavigator
OpenModal, CloseModal - Dimension 1: Stack Navigator
The following steps will show how to setup the ISectionsNavigator
.
💡 If you want to create a single stack application, check this doc instead.
Getting Started
Install the latest version of
Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Uno
orChinook.SectionsNavigation.Uno.WinUI
in your project.Create a base class that implements
INavigableViewModel
for your ViewModels.You can use the MVVM framework of your choice. In this sample, we use
ViewModelBase
fromChinook.DynamicMvvm
.using Chinook.DynamicMvvm; using Chinook.StackNavigation; using Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls; namespace ChinookSample { public class ViewModel : ViewModelBase, INavigableViewModel { public void SetView(object view) { // For Chinook.DynamicMvvm, we want to create an MVVM dispatcher using the CoreDispatcher of the Page. Dispatcher = new CoreDispatcherDispatcher((Page)view); } } }
Map your ViewModels to Pages.
Create a method returning a dictionary associating the types. You can put that method in
App.xaml.cs
.private static IReadOnlyDictionary<Type, Type> GetPageRegistrations() => new Dictionary<Type, Type>() { // Assuming that MainPageViewModel is a class that inherits from the ViewModel class of the previous step. { typeof(MainPageViewModel), typeof(MainPage) } };
Add a
MultiFrame
at the root of your application's XAML.You can do this in various ways. We suggest you create a
UserControl
which contains theMultiFrame
and set thatUserControl
as the content of the application'sWindow
.Here's a minimal example:
<UserControl x:Class="ChinookSample.Shell" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" xmlns:nav="using:Chinook.SectionsNavigation"> <Grid> <nav:MultiFrame x:Name="NavigationRoot" CommaSeparatedSectionsFrameNames="Home,Settings"/> </Grid> </UserControl>
Make sure you publicly expose the
MultiFrame
instance from the code behind of yourUserControl
.using Windows.UI.Xaml.Controls; using Chinook.SectionsNavigation; namespace ChinookSample { public sealed partial class Shell : UserControl { public Shell() { this.InitializeComponent(); } public MultiFrame MultiFrame => NavigationRoot; } }
Adjust the
OnLaunched
of yourApp.xaml.cs
so that it does the following.- Set your newly added
Shell
as the content of the window. - Create a
FrameSectionsNavigator
using theMultiFrame
from theShell
and the page registrations. - Do an initial navigation to display a page.
protected override void OnLaunched(LaunchActivatedEventArgs e) { var root = Window.Current.Content as Shell; if (root == null) { // Set the Shell as the window content. root = new Shell(); Window.Current.Content = root; // Create the navigator var navigator = new FrameSectionsNavigator( multiFrame: root.MultiFrame, globalRegistrations: GetPageRegistrations() ); // Do an initial navigation _ = navigator.SetActiveSection(CancellationToken.None, "Home", () => new MainPageViewModel()); } Window.Current.Activate(); }
- Set your newly added
Start your application!
From there you probably want to publicly expose the your
ISectionsNavigator
instance to your ViewModels so that they can manipulate the navigation. You can do that using the pattern of your choice.
Features
Stack Navigation
Stack navigation is the basic pattern for navigating forward and back. It's reused in both sections and modals.
Navigate forward and back
// Navigate to the PersonDetailsPage.
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new PersonDetailsPageViewModel());
// Navigate back.
await navigator.NavigateBack(ct);
iOS back gesture
The back swipe gesture is supported on iOS devices when using FrameStackNavigator
.
Navigate forward, clearing the backstack
This can be useful when you don't want the user to be able to navigate back.
// Navigate to the HomePage, clearing all other previous pages from the backstack.
await navigator.NavigateAndClear(ct, () => new HomePageViewModel());
Remove previous pages
// Navigate to Step 1
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new Step1PageViewModel());
// Navigate to Step 2
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new Step2PageViewModel());
// Navigate to Step 2.1
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new Step21PageViewModel());
// Navigate to Step 3
await navigator.Navigate(ct, () => new Step3PageViewModel());
// Remove the previous page (Step 2.1) from the backstack.
await navigator.RemovePrevious(ct);
// Navigate back to Step 2
await navigator.NavigateBack(ct);
Observe the StackNavigator's State
You can access the stack navigator's state using IStackNavigator.State
.
It gives you access to the navigation stack as well as the last request.
You can observe the state with the IStackNavigator.StateChanged
event.
Sections
Sections are independent stacks that live next to each other. Only 1 section can be active at a time. Apps that have a bottom navigation bar typically would use 1 section per bottom bar button and perhaps another for the login pages.
Change between sections
// Go to Home section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Home");
// Go to Messages section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Messages");
// Go to Settings section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Settings");
Return to root of section
This can be useful to simply reset a section when returning to it.
// Go to Home section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Home", () => new HomePageViewModel());
// Navigate forward to some details page in the Home section.
await sectionsNavigator.Navigate(ct, () => new PersonDetailsPageViewModel());
// Go to Messages section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Messages");
// Return to Home section on the Home page, not the PersonDetails page.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Home", () => new HomePageViewModel(), returnToRoot: true);
💡 When tapping on a bottom section button, some applications have a dual behavior:
- Tap once: the app returns to that section.
- Tap a second time: the section returns to its root.
ISectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection
supports such behavior.
Navigate in an inactive section
You can navigate in sections that are not active. This is useful if you want to prepare a section before entering it to have smooth transitions.
// Go to Home section.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Home", () => new HomePageViewModel());
// Get the settings section navigator.
var settingsSection = sectionsNavigator.State.Sections["Settings"];
// Navigate forward to the SettingsPage, then the LicencePage in the Settings section.
// The Settings sections is not currently active, so you don't actually see this change happen.
await settingsSection.Navigate(ct, () => new SettingsPageViewModel());
await settingsSection.Navigate(ct, () => new LicencePageViewModel());
// Go to Settings section to see the Licence page.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Settings");
// Navigate back to SettingsPage.
await sectionsNavigator.NavigateBack(ct);
Modals
ISectionsNavigator
allows you to handle multiple stacks of navigation in your app, including modals.
Modals are navigation stacks that show up on top of all other sections.
A modal stack behaves like any other section, meaning you can navigate back and forth in it.
Your app can also navigate the pages behind the modals, without breaking the flow.
Open and close modals
// Open LoginPage in a modal.
await sectionsNavigator.OpenModal(ct, () => new LoginPageViewModel());
// Close the modal.
await sectionsNavigator.CloseModal(ct);
Open modals behind other modals
It's possible to open a modal behind a modal that's already open. This can be useful to show an optional extra step in a modal flow, while keeping nice transitions.
// Open LoginPage in a modal with a priority of 2.
await sectionsNavigator.OpenModal(ct, () => new LoginPageViewModel(), priority = 2);
// Open the SurveyPage in a modal behind the LoginPage page modal, using a lower priority of 1.
// Because the SurveyPage opens with a lower priority, you don't actually see this change happen.
await sectionsNavigator.OpenModal(ct, () => new SurveyPageViewModel(), priority = 1);
// Close the top-most modal (LoginPage) to reveal the SurveyPage modal behind it.
await sectionsNavigator.CloseModal(ct);
Change sections behind modals
You can navigate in sections that are not active. This is useful if you want to prepare a section before entering it.
// Open LoginPage in a modal.
await sectionsNavigator.OpenModal(ct, () => new LoginPageViewModel());
// Change the section to Messages.
// Modals are displayed on top of sections, so you don't actually see this change happen.
await sectionsNavigator.SetActiveSection(ct, "Messages", () => new MessagesPageViewModel());
// Close the modal to reveal the Messages section.
await sectionsNavigator.CloseModal(ct);
Navigate back or close modal
There are handy extension methods on ISectionsNavigator
to easily check whether you can navigate back or close a modal.
This can be useful when dealing with an hardware back button.
// Check whether the navigator can navigate back or close a modal.
if (sectionsNavigator.CanNavigateBackOrCloseModal())
{
// Navigates back within the modal if the modal has multiple pages in its stack
// Or closes the modal if there's a modal that has an empty backstack
// Or navigates back in the active section.
await sectionsNavigator.NavigateBackOrCloseModal(ct);
}
Observe the SectionsNavigator's State
You can access the sections navigator's state using ISectionsNavigator.State
.
It gives you access to all section stacks and modal stacks as well as the last request.
You can observe the state with the ISectionsNavigator.StateChanged
event.
Ready for Dependency Injection
The two navigation services are made from simple interfaces.
You can easily leverage containers such as Microsoft's Generic Host.
Here is an example that registers and retrieves the ISectionsNavigator
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection
and Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting
.
var serviceProvider = new HostBuilder()
.ConfigureServices(serviceCollection => serviceCollection
.AddSingleton<ISectionsNavigator>(new FrameSectionsNavigator(
multiFrame: root.MultiFrame,
globalRegistrations: GetPageRegistrations()
))
)
.Build()
.Services;
var navigator = serviceProvider.GetService<ISectionsNavigator>();
Ready for Integration Testing
Because this is ViewModel-based navigation and the navigator interfaces don't reference any UI type, you can use the navigators in Test Projects or Console Applications without changing your navigation logic
Just install the Chinook.SectionsNavigation
or Chinook.StackNavigation
packages and use the BlindSectionsNavigator
or BlindStackNavigator
implementations.
Built-in Debounce
Implementations of both IStackNavigator
and ISectionsNavigator
have a built-in debounce mechanism that prevents double navigations.
If you invoke 2 operations simultaneously (double tap, press 2 buttons with 2 fingers, etc.), only the first will actually run.
This is because the request state (Processing, Processed or FailedToProcess) is part of the ISectionsNavigator.State
.
If a request is made while another is processing, the second request is cancelled.
Transitions and Animations
For stack navigation, you can suppress the default transitions using StackNavigatorRequest.SuppressTransitions
.
When using FrameSectionsNavigator
, you can customize or remove the animations using SectionsTransitionInfo
.
You can specify transition info per request (using SectionsNavigatorRequest.TransitionInfo
) and globally using the following:
FrameSectionsNavigator.DefaultSetActiveSectionTransitionInfo
FrameSectionsNavigator.DefaultOpenModalTransitionInfo
FrameSectionsNavigator.DefaultCloseModalTransitionInfo
There are multiple statically available built-in transition info in FrameSectionsTransitionInfo
.
Use FrameSectionsTransitionInfo.SuppressTransition
to disable animations.
You can also create custom ones using the following classes:
DelegatingFrameSectionsTransitionInfo
- Available on all platforms.
- Allows you to create a transition in an async method where you can animate using
Storyboard
.
UIViewControllerTransitionInfo
- Available on iOS only.
- Allows you to customize the native behavior (such as dismissability via gestures and animations).
Breaking Changes
Please consult BREAKING_CHANGES.md for more information about migration.
License
This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license - see the LICENSE file for details.
Contributing
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on the process for contributing to this project.
Be mindful of our Code of Conduct.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net5.0 was computed. net5.0-windows was computed. net6.0 was computed. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
.NET Core | netcoreapp2.0 was computed. netcoreapp2.1 was computed. netcoreapp2.2 was computed. netcoreapp3.0 was computed. netcoreapp3.1 was computed. |
.NET Standard | netstandard2.0 is compatible. netstandard2.1 was computed. |
.NET Framework | net461 was computed. net462 was computed. net463 was computed. net47 was computed. net471 was computed. net472 was computed. net48 was computed. net481 was computed. |
MonoAndroid | monoandroid was computed. |
MonoMac | monomac was computed. |
MonoTouch | monotouch was computed. |
Tizen | tizen40 was computed. tizen60 was computed. |
Xamarin.iOS | xamarinios was computed. |
Xamarin.Mac | xamarinmac was computed. |
Xamarin.TVOS | xamarintvos was computed. |
Xamarin.WatchOS | xamarinwatchos was computed. |
-
.NETStandard 2.0
- Chinook.SectionsNavigation.Abstractions (>= 1.1.1)
- Chinook.StackNavigation.Reactive (>= 1.1.1)
- System.Reactive (>= 4.4.1)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
3.0.2 | 2,339 | 2/22/2024 |
3.0.1 | 7,652 | 1/18/2024 |
3.0.0 | 1,358 | 12/22/2023 |
3.0.0-feature.Uno5Update.7 | 148 | 12/6/2023 |
3.0.0-feature.Uno5Update.4 | 1,786 | 11/28/2023 |
2.1.2 | 6,231 | 2/22/2024 |
2.1.1 | 10,099 | 6/15/2023 |
2.1.0 | 380 | 6/15/2023 |
2.0.0 | 14,148 | 4/12/2023 |
1.1.2 | 58,014 | 10/14/2022 |
1.1.1 | 402 | 10/12/2022 |
1.1.0 | 2,283 | 9/23/2022 |
1.1.0-feature.dotnet6.12 | 140 | 9/22/2022 |
1.1.0-feature.dotnet6.4 | 125 | 9/16/2022 |
1.0.0 | 1,308 | 9/2/2022 |
0.7.0 | 458 | 8/30/2022 |
0.7.0-dev.91 | 14,583 | 5/17/2022 |
0.7.0-dev.88 | 13,966 | 4/13/2022 |
0.7.0-dev.86 | 159 | 4/12/2022 |
0.7.0-dev.83 | 274 | 3/30/2022 |
0.6.0-feature.uno-ui-4.79 | 166 | 3/15/2022 |
0.6.0-feature.uno-ui-4.78 | 144 | 3/15/2022 |
0.6.0-dev.80 | 300 | 3/15/2022 |
0.5.0-feature.uno-ui-4.77 | 5,340 | 1/25/2022 |
0.5.0-dev.73 | 10,904 | 1/24/2022 |
0.5.0-dev.71 | 160 | 1/20/2022 |
0.4.0-feature.uno-ui-4.70 | 210 | 12/20/2021 |
0.4.0-dev.69 | 10,001 | 10/12/2021 |
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0.4.0-dev.65 | 263 | 4/20/2021 |
0.4.0-dev.62 | 1,682 | 4/19/2021 |
0.4.0-dev.59 | 8,966 | 4/6/2021 |
0.3.0-dev.53 | 215 | 3/30/2021 |
0.3.0-dev.50 | 7,935 | 3/16/2021 |
0.2.0-dev.46 | 1,589 | 12/17/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.44 | 5,405 | 12/4/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.42 | 285 | 12/4/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.39 | 311 | 11/2/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.37 | 9,352 | 8/21/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.33 | 5,363 | 8/13/2020 |
0.2.0-dev.31 | 309 | 6/26/2020 |
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