Router Navigate does not call ngOnInit when same page

Solution 1:

You can inject the ActivatedRoute and subscribe to params

constructor(route:ActivatedRoute) {
  route.params.subscribe(val => {
    // put the code from `ngOnInit` here
  });
}

The router only destroys and recreates the component when it navigates to a different route. When only route params or query params are updated but the route is the same, the component won't be destroyed and recreated.

An alternative way to force the component to be recreated is to use a custom reuse strategy. See also Angular2 router 2.0.0 not reloading components when same url loaded with different parameters? (there doesn't seem to be much information available yet how to implement it)

Solution 2:

You could adjust the reuseStrategy on the Router.

constructor(private router: Router) {
    // override the route reuse strategy
    this.router.routeReuseStrategy.shouldReuseRoute = function() {
        return false;
    };
}

Solution 3:

Angular 9

I have used the following and it worked.

onButtonClick() {
    this.router.routeReuseStrategy.shouldReuseRoute = function () {
        return false;
    }
    this.router.onSameUrlNavigation = 'reload';
    this.router.navigate('/myroute', { queryParams: { index: 1 } });
}

Solution 4:

Do you probably need reloading page? This is my solution: I've changed the @NgModule (in app-routing.module.ts file in my case) :

@NgModule({
  imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes, {onSameUrlNavigation: 'reload'})] })

Solution 5:

Here is a collection of the best ideas on this page with more information

Solution 1 - Use params subscription:

Tutorial: https://angular-2-training-book.rangle.io/routing/routeparams#reading-route-parameters

Docs: https://angular.io/api/router/ActivatedRoute#params

In each of your routing components that use param variables include the following:

import { Component, OnInit, OnDestroy } from '@angular/core';
import { ActivatedRoute } from '@angular/router';
import { Subscription } from 'rxjs';

// ...

@Component({
    // ...
})
export class MyComponent implements OnInit, OnDestroy {
    paramsSub: Subscription;

    // ...

    constructor(activeRoute: ActivatedRoute) {

    }

    public ngOnInit(): void {
        // ...
        this.paramsSub = this.activeRoute.params.subscribe(val => {
            // Handle param values here
        });

        // ...
    }

    // ...

    public ngOnDestroy(): void {
        // Prevent memory leaks
        this.paramsSub.unsubscribe();
    }
}

Some common issues with this code is that subscriptions are asynchronous and can be trickier to deal with. Also you can't forget to unsubscribe on ngOnDestroy or else bad things can happen.

Good thing is that this is the most documented and common way to handle this problem. There's also a performance improvement doing it this way since you are reusing the template instead of destroying and recreating each time you visit a page.

Solution 2 - shouldReuseRoute / onSameUrlNavigation:

Docs: https://angular.io/api/router/ExtraOptions#onSameUrlNavigation

Docs: https://angular.io/api/router/RouteReuseStrategy#shouldReuseRoute

Docs: https://angular.io/api/router/ActivatedRouteSnapshot#params

Find where RouterModule.forRoot is located in your project (normally found in app-routing.module.ts or app.module.ts):

const routes: Routes = [
   // ...
];

// ...

@NgModule({
    imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes, {
        onSameUrlNavigation: 'reload'
    })],
    exports: [RouterModule]
})

Then in AppComponent add the following:

import { Component, OnInit} from '@angular/core';
import { Router } from '@angular/router';

// ...
@Component({
    // ...
})
export class AppComponent implements OnInit {
    constructor(private router: Router) {
    }

    ngOnInit() {
        // Allows for ngOnInit to be called on routing to the same routing Component since we will never reuse a route
        this.router.routeReuseStrategy.shouldReuseRoute = function() {
            return false;
        };

        // ...
    }

    // ...
}

Last, in your routing components you can now handle param variables like this:

import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import { ActivatedRoute } from '@angular/router';

// ...

@Component({
    // ...
})
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {
    // ...

    constructor(activeRoute: ActivatedRoute) {

    }

    public ngOnInit(): void {
        // Handle params
        const params = +this.activeRoute.snapshot.params;

        // ...
    }

    // ...
}

Common issues with this solution is that it isn't common. Also you are changing the default behavior of the Angular framework, so you can run into issues people wouldn't normally run into.

Good thing is that all your code is synchronous and easier to understand.