default.js
The default.js
file is used to render a fallback within Parallel Routes when Next.js cannot recover a slot's active state after a full-page load.
During soft navigation, Next.js keeps track of the active state (subpage) for each slot. However, for hard navigations (full-page load), Next.js cannot recover the active state. In this case, a default.js
file can be rendered for subpages that don't match the current URL.
Consider the following folder structure. The @team
slot has a settings
page, but @analytics
does not.
When navigating to /settings
, the @team
slot will render the settings
page while maintaining the currently active page for the @analytics
slot.
On refresh, Next.js will render a default.js
for @analytics
. If default.js
doesn't exist, a 404
is rendered instead.
Additionally, since children
is an implicit slot, you also need to create a default.js
file to render a fallback for children
when Next.js cannot recover the active state of the parent page.
Reference
params
(optional)
A promise that resolves to an object containing the dynamic route parameters from the root segment down to the slot's subpages. For example:
export default async function Default({
params,
}: {
params: Promise<{ artist: string }>
}) {
const artist = (await params).artist
}
Example | URL | params |
---|---|---|
app/[artist]/@sidebar/default.js | /zack | Promise<{ artist: 'zack' }> |
app/[artist]/[album]/@sidebar/default.js | /zack/next | Promise<{ artist: 'zack', album: 'next' }> |
- Since the
params
prop is a promise. You must useasync/await
or React'suse
function to access the values.- In version 14 and earlier,
params
was a synchronous prop. To help with backwards compatibility, you can still access it synchronously in Next.js 15, but this behavior will be deprecated in the future.
- In version 14 and earlier,
Learn more about Parallel Routes
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