Claude-skill-registry expo-router
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/expo-router" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-expo-router && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data/expo-router/SKILL.mdWhat is Expo Router?
Expo Router is a file-based router for Universal React Native applications. It brings the best file-system routing concepts from the web to native applications, allowing your routing to work seamlessly across Android, iOS, and web platforms.
Core Principles
- File-based routing: When a file is added to the
directory, it automatically becomes a routeapp/ - Universal: Same navigation structure works on Android, iOS, and web
- Built on React Navigation: Provides native platform-optimized navigation
- Deep linkable: Every screen is automatically shareable with URLs
- Offline-first: Routes are cached and run without network connection
- Type-safe: Full TypeScript support with auto-generated typed routes
File Notation System
Expo Router uses special file naming conventions to define routing behavior:
1. Static Routes (No Notation)
app/ ├── home.tsx # /home ├── feed/ │ └── favorites.tsx # /feed/favorites
Regular file and directory names create static routes. The URL matches exactly as it appears in the file tree.
2. Dynamic Routes (Square Brackets)
app/ ├── [userName].tsx # /evanbacon, /expo, etc. ├── products/ │ └── [productId]/ │ └── index.tsx # /products/123
Square brackets
[param] create dynamic segments. The parameter is accessible via useLocalSearchParams() hook:
// app/[userName].tsx import { useLocalSearchParams } from "expo-router"; export default function UserProfile() { const { userName } = useLocalSearchParams<{ userName: string }>(); // userName = "evanbacon" when visiting /evanbacon }
3. Route Groups (Parentheses)
app/ ├── (tabs)/ │ ├── index.tsx # / (not /tabs) │ └── settings.tsx # /settings (not /tabs/settings) ├── (auth)/ │ ├── login.tsx # /login (not /auth/login) │ └── signup.tsx # /signup
Parentheses
(group) create route groups that organize files without affecting the URL structure. Critical for:
- Organizing related routes
- Sharing layouts between routes
- Creating multiple navigation contexts (tabs, stacks)
4. Index Routes
app/ ├── index.tsx # / (root) ├── profile/ │ └── index.tsx # /profile
index.tsx files define the default route for a directory. Like index.html on the web.
5. Layout Routes (_layout.tsx)
app/ ├── _layout.tsx # Root layout (wraps everything) ├── (tabs)/ │ ├── _layout.tsx # Tab navigator layout │ └── index.tsx
_layout.tsx files are not routes themselves but define how routes inside their directory relate to each other:
- Define navigation structure (Stack, Tabs, Drawer)
- Wrap child routes with providers
- Configure screen options
- Rendered before child routes
Critical: The root
app/_layout.tsx is where initialization code goes (previously in App.jsx).
6. Special Routes (Plus Sign)
app/ ├── +not-found.tsx # 404 handler ├── +html.tsx # Web HTML customization ├── +native-intent.tsx # Deep link handler ├── +middleware.ts # Request middleware
Routes with
+ prefix have special meaning:
: Catches unmatched routes (404)+not-found
: Customizes HTML boilerplate on web+html
: Handles third-party deep links+native-intent
: Runs code before route renders+middleware
Navigation Structures
Stack Navigator
A stack is the foundational navigation pattern. Routes animate on top of each other:
- Android: Slides up from bottom
- iOS: Slides in from right
- Web: Browser-like navigation
// app/_layout.tsx import { Stack } from 'expo-router'; export default function Layout() { return ( <Stack> <Stack.Screen name="index" options={{ title: 'Home' }} /> <Stack.Screen name="details" options={{ title: 'Details' }} /> <Stack.Screen name="modal" options={{ presentation: 'modal' }} /> </Stack> ); }
How it works: Each
<Stack.Screen> corresponds to a file in the same directory. The name prop matches the filename (without extension).
Tab Navigator
Tabs create a persistent bottom navigation bar (iOS/Android) or top tabs:
// app/(tabs)/_layout.tsx import { Tabs } from 'expo-router'; export default function TabLayout() { return ( <Tabs screenOptions={{ tabBarActiveTintColor: 'blue' }}> <Tabs.Screen name="index" options={{ title: 'Home', tabBarIcon: ({ color }) => <HomeIcon color={color} /> }} /> <Tabs.Screen name="profile" options={{ title: 'Profile', tabBarIcon: ({ color }) => <UserIcon color={color} /> }} /> </Tabs> ); }
File structure:
app/ ├── _layout.tsx # Root stack └── (tabs)/ # Route group (no URL segment) ├── _layout.tsx # Tab navigator ├── index.tsx # First tab (/) └── profile.tsx # Second tab (/profile)
Why route groups? The
(tabs) group prevents /tabs/profile and creates clean URLs like /profile.
Nested Navigation
Layouts can be nested to create complex navigation hierarchies:
app/ ├── _layout.tsx # Root Stack └── (tabs)/ # Route group ├── _layout.tsx # Tabs (Home, Feed, Profile) ├── index.tsx # Home tab ├── feed/ │ ├── _layout.tsx # Stack inside Feed tab │ ├── index.tsx # Feed list │ └── [id].tsx # Feed detail (pushed on stack) └── profile.tsx # Profile tab
Navigation flow:
- Root layout renders Tabs
- Tabs render Home/Feed/Profile
- Feed tab has its own Stack for list → detail navigation
Navigation APIs
Imperative Navigation
import { router } from "expo-router"; // Push new route on stack router.push("/profile"); router.push({ pathname: "/user/[id]", params: { id: "123" } }); // Replace current route (no back button) router.replace("/login"); // Go back router.back(); // Navigate to specific route in stack router.navigate("/settings"); // Dismiss modal/stack router.dismiss(); router.dismissAll();
Declarative Navigation
import { Link } from 'expo-router'; // Static route <Link href="/profile">Go to Profile</Link> // Dynamic route <Link href={{ pathname: '/user/[id]', params: { id: userId } }}> View User </Link> // Replace instead of push <Link href="/login" replace>Login</Link>
Navigation State Hooks
import { usePathname, useSegments, useLocalSearchParams } from "expo-router"; // Current path const pathname = usePathname(); // "/feed/123" // Path segments const segments = useSegments(); // ["feed", "123"] // Route parameters const { id } = useLocalSearchParams<{ id: string }>();
Typed Routes (Liftera Enabled)
Liftera has
experiments.typedRoutes: true in app.json, enabling compile-time route validation.
How It Works
- Expo CLI scans
directoryapp/ - Generates
with all valid routes.expo/types/router.d.ts - TypeScript validates
props at compile timehref
Type-Safe Navigation
import { router, Link } from 'expo-router'; // ✅ Valid routes - TypeScript happy <Link href="/profile" /> <Link href="/feed/favorites" /> <Link href={{ pathname: '/user/[id]', params: { id: '123' } }} /> // ❌ TypeScript errors - route doesn't exist <Link href="/profle" /> // Typo caught at compile time <Link href="/invalid" /> // ❌ TypeScript errors - missing required params <Link href="/user/[id]" /> // Must use object form with params // ❌ TypeScript errors - invalid params <Link href={{ pathname: '/user/[id]', params: { userId: '123' } }} /> // Param name must be 'id', not 'userId'
Benefits
- Catch typos before runtime
- Autocomplete for all routes
- Refactor safely - rename files, TypeScript finds all usages
- Parameter validation - ensure correct param names
Modals
Modals are routes presented differently, not separate components.
// app/_layout.tsx <Stack> <Stack.Screen name="index" /> <Stack.Screen name="modal" options={{ presentation: 'modal', // Modal presentation headerShown: false, animation: 'slide_from_bottom' }} /> </Stack>
Navigate to modal:
router.push("/modal"); // Presents as modal router.back(); // Dismisses modal
Deep linking: Modals work with deep links. Opening
myapp://modal presents the modal correctly.
Deep Linking & Universal Links
Every route is automatically deep linkable:
// app.json { "expo": { "scheme": "liftera" } }
URL mapping:
→liftera://
(index)/
→liftera://profile/profile
→liftera://user/123
with/user/[id]id: "123"
Web URLs (when deployed):
→https://liftera.app//
→https://liftera.app/profile/profile
Same code, all platforms - no platform-specific linking logic needed.
Critical Patterns
Protected Routes
// app/_layout.tsx import { useAuth } from '@/hooks/useAuth'; import { Redirect, Slot } from 'expo-router'; export default function RootLayout() { const { user, loading } = useAuth(); if (loading) return <LoadingScreen />; if (!user) return <Redirect href="/login" />; return <Slot />; }
How it works: Root layout checks auth state. Unauthenticated users are redirected before any child routes render.
Shared Layouts
// app/(app)/_layout.tsx - Authenticated app <Stack> <Stack.Screen name="(tabs)" options={{ headerShown: false }} /> </Stack> // app/(auth)/_layout.tsx - Auth flow <Stack screenOptions={{ headerShown: false }}> <Stack.Screen name="login" /> <Stack.Screen name="signup" /> </Stack>
Route groups let you define different layout contexts for different parts of your app.
Error Boundaries
// app/_layout.tsx export { ErrorBoundary } from 'expo-router'; // Or custom export function ErrorBoundary({ error, retry }: ErrorBoundaryProps) { return ( <View> <Text>Error: {error.message}</Text> <Button onPress={retry}>Try Again</Button> </View> ); }
Automatic error handling: Errors in routes are caught and displayed without crashing the app.
Critical Rules
File Naming
- ALWAYS use
extension for TypeScript routes.tsx - NEVER use
- Liftera is TypeScript-first.js - ALWAYS use lowercase for route files (convention)
Layouts
- ALWAYS define
when using Stack/Tabs_layout.tsx - NEVER skip root
- it's requiredapp/_layout.tsx - ALWAYS render
in layouts without navigators<Slot />
Navigation
- ALWAYS use typed routes with
useLocalSearchParams<T>() - NEVER hardcode route strings - let TypeScript validate
- ALWAYS use object form for dynamic routes with params
- NEVER import React Navigation directly - use Expo Router APIs
Route Groups
- ALWAYS use
for organizing without URL impact(group) - NEVER nest route groups unnecessarily
- ALWAYS use route groups for tabs/auth flows
Resources
- Expo Router Docs: https://docs.expo.dev/router/introduction/
- File Notation: https://docs.expo.dev/router/basics/notation/
- Typed Routes: https://docs.expo.dev/router/reference/typed-routes/
- Stack Navigator: https://docs.expo.dev/router/advanced/stack/
- Tabs Navigator: https://docs.expo.dev/router/advanced/tabs/
- Modals: https://docs.expo.dev/router/advanced/modals/