One job of a route handler is rendering the appropriate template to the screen.
By default, a route handler will render the template with the same name as the route. Take this router:
Router.map(function() {
this.route('posts', function() {
this.route('new');
});
});
Here, the posts
route will render the posts.hbs
template, and
the posts.new
route will render posts/new.hbs
.
Each template will be rendered into the {{outlet}}
of its parent route's
template. For example, the posts.new
route will render its template into the
posts.hbs
's {{outlet}}
, and the posts
route will render its template into
the application.hbs
's {{outlet}}
.
If you want to render a template other than the default one, set the route's templateName
property to the name of
the template you want to render instead.
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
templateName: 'posts/favorite-posts'
});
You can override the renderTemplate()
hook if you want finer control over template rendering.
Among other things, it allows you to choose the controller used to configure the template and specific outlet to render it into.