Назад към всички

app-router

// This skill should be used when the user asks to "create a Next.js route", "add a page", "set up layouts", "implement loading states", "add error boundaries", "organize routes", "create dynamic routes", or needs guidance on Next.js App Router file conventions and routing patterns.

$ git log --oneline --stat
stars:2,530
forks:481
updated:February 21, 2026
SKILL.mdreadonly
SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameapp-router
descriptionThis skill should be used when the user asks to "create a Next.js route", "add a page", "set up layouts", "implement loading states", "add error boundaries", "organize routes", "create dynamic routes", or needs guidance on Next.js App Router file conventions and routing patterns.
version1.0.0

Next.js App Router Patterns

Overview

The App Router is Next.js's file-system based router built on React Server Components. It uses a app/ directory structure where folders define routes and special files control UI behavior.

Core File Conventions

Route Files

Each route segment is defined by a folder. Special files within folders control behavior:

FilePurpose
page.tsxUnique UI for a route, makes route publicly accessible
layout.tsxShared UI wrapper, preserves state across navigations
loading.tsxLoading UI using React Suspense
error.tsxError boundary for route segment
not-found.tsxUI for 404 responses
template.tsxLike layout but re-renders on navigation
default.tsxFallback for parallel routes

Folder Conventions

PatternPurposeExample
folder/Route segmentapp/blog//blog
[folder]/Dynamic segmentapp/blog/[slug]//blog/:slug
[...folder]/Catch-all segmentapp/docs/[...slug]//docs/*
[[...folder]]/Optional catch-allapp/shop/[[...slug]]//shop or /shop/*
(folder)/Route group (no URL)app/(marketing)/about//about
@folder/Named slot (parallel routes)app/@modal/login/
_folder/Private folder (excluded)app/_components/

Creating Routes

Basic Route Structure

To create a new route, add a folder with page.tsx:

app/
├── page.tsx              # / (home)
├── about/
│   └── page.tsx          # /about
└── blog/
    ├── page.tsx          # /blog
    └── [slug]/
        └── page.tsx      # /blog/:slug

Page Component

A page is a Server Component by default:

// app/about/page.tsx
export default function AboutPage() {
  return (
    <main>
      <h1>About Us</h1>
      <p>Welcome to our company.</p>
    </main>
  )
}

Dynamic Routes

Access route parameters via the params prop:

// app/blog/[slug]/page.tsx
interface PageProps {
  params: Promise<{ slug: string }>
}

export default async function BlogPost({ params }: PageProps) {
  const { slug } = await params
  const post = await getPost(slug)

  return <article>{post.content}</article>
}

Layouts

Root Layout (Required)

Every app needs a root layout with <html> and <body>:

// app/layout.tsx
export default function RootLayout({
  children,
}: {
  children: React.ReactNode
}) {
  return (
    <html lang="en">
      <body>{children}</body>
    </html>
  )
}

Nested Layouts

Layouts wrap their children and preserve state:

// app/dashboard/layout.tsx
export default function DashboardLayout({
  children,
}: {
  children: React.ReactNode
}) {
  return (
    <div className="flex">
      <Sidebar />
      <main className="flex-1">{children}</main>
    </div>
  )
}

Loading and Error States

Loading UI

Create instant loading states with Suspense:

// app/dashboard/loading.tsx
export default function Loading() {
  return <div className="animate-pulse">Loading...</div>
}

Error Boundaries

Handle errors gracefully:

// app/dashboard/error.tsx
'use client'

export default function Error({
  error,
  reset,
}: {
  error: Error
  reset: () => void
}) {
  return (
    <div>
      <h2>Something went wrong!</h2>
      <button onClick={reset}>Try again</button>
    </div>
  )
}

Route Groups

Organize routes without affecting URL structure:

app/
├── (marketing)/
│   ├── layout.tsx        # Marketing layout
│   ├── about/page.tsx    # /about
│   └── contact/page.tsx  # /contact
└── (shop)/
    ├── layout.tsx        # Shop layout
    └── products/page.tsx # /products

Metadata

Static Metadata

// app/about/page.tsx
import { Metadata } from 'next'

export const metadata: Metadata = {
  title: 'About Us',
  description: 'Learn more about our company',
}

Dynamic Metadata

// app/blog/[slug]/page.tsx
export async function generateMetadata({ params }: PageProps): Promise<Metadata> {
  const { slug } = await params
  const post = await getPost(slug)
  return { title: post.title }
}

Key Patterns

  1. Colocation: Keep components, tests, and styles near routes
  2. Private folders: Use _folder for non-route files
  3. Route groups: Use (folder) to organize without URL impact
  4. Parallel routes: Use @slot for complex layouts
  5. Intercepting routes: Use (.) patterns for modals

Resources

For detailed patterns, see:

  • references/routing-conventions.md - Complete file conventions
  • references/layouts-templates.md - Layout composition patterns
  • references/loading-error-states.md - Suspense and error handling
  • examples/dynamic-routes.md - Dynamic routing examples
  • examples/parallel-routes.md - Parallel and intercepting routes