Defining the routes
In a web application, a route is a URL path pattern. Vue Router will map it to a specific handler. This handler is a Vue component, defined and located in a physical file. For example, when the user enters the localhost:3000/home
route, if you map the HomeView
component to this specific route, the routing system knows how to render HomeView
content accordingly.
As seen in Figure 7.2, it is crucial to set up routes
(or paths) for navigation within the application; otherwise, your application will display as empty.
Each route is an object literal that uses the RouteRecordRaw
interface with the following properties:
interface RouteRecordRaw = {   path: string,   component?: Component,   name?: string, // for named routes   components?: { [name: string]: Component }, // for named     views   redirect?: string | Location | Function,   props?: boolean | Object | Function,  &...