There is no out of the box mechanism for that. However you can mimic Django's style like that: define urls.js
file which will hold an array of URLs. First start with:
myviews.js
exports.Index = function( req, res, next ) {
res.send( "hello world!" );
};
urls.js
var MyViews = require( "mywviews.js" );
module.exports = [
{ name : "index", pattern : "/", view : MyViews.Index }
]
Now in app.js ( or whatever the main file is ) you need to bind urls to Express. For example like this:
app.js
var urls = require( "urls.js" );
for ( var i = 0, l = urls.length; i < l; i++ ) {
var url = urls[ i ];
app.all( url.pattern, url.view );
};
Now you can define custom helper ( Express 3.0 style ):
var urls = require( "urls.js" ), l = urls.length;
app.locals.url = function( name ) {
for ( var i = 0; i < l; i++ ) {
var url = urls[ i ];
if ( url.name === name ) {
return url.pattern;
}
};
};
and you can easily use it in your template. Now the problem is that it does not give you fancy URL creation mechanism like in Django ( where you can pass additional parameters to url
). On the other hand you can modify url
function and extend it. I don't want to go into all details here, but here's an example how to use regular expressions ( you should be able to combine these to ideas together ):
Express JS reverse URL route (Django style)
Note that I posted the question, so I had the same problem some time ago. :D
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