Routes define what happens when your client connects to a certain URL.<br>
##Macro
`CROW_ROUTE(app, url)`<br>
Can be replaced with `#!cpp app.route<crow::black_magick::get_parameter_tag(url)>(url)` or `#!cpp app.route_dynamic(url)` if you're using VS2013 or want runtime url evaluation. Although this usage is **NOT** recommended.
##App
Which app class to assign the route to.
##Path (URL)
Which relative path is assigned to the route.<br>
Using `/hello` means the client will need to access `http://example.com/hello` in order to access the route.<br>
A path can have parameters, for example `/hello/<int>` will allow a client to input an int into the url which will be in the handler (something like `http://example.com/hello/42`).<br>
Parameters can be `<int>`, `<uint>`, `<double>`, `<string>`, or `<path>`.<br>
It's worth nothing that the parameters also need to be defined in the handler, an example of using parameters would be to add 2 numbers based on input:
```cpp
CROW_ROUTE(app, "/add/<int>/<int>")
([](int a, int b)
{
return std::to_string(a+b);
});
```
you can see the first `<int>` is defined as `a` and the second as `b`. If you were to run this and call `http://example.com/add/1/2`, the result would be a page with `3`. Exciting!
You can change the HTTP methods the route uses from just the default `GET` by using `method()`, your route macro should look like `CROW_ROUTE(app, "/add/<int>/<int>").methods(crow::HTTPMethod::GET, crow::HTTPMethod::PATCH)` or `CROW_ROUTE(app, "/add/<int>/<int>").methods("GET"_method, "PATCH"_method)`.
Basically a piece of code that gets executed whenever the client calls the associated route, usually in the form of a [lambda expression](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/lambda). It can be as simple as `#!cpp ([](){return "Hello World"})`.<br><br>
###Request
Handlers can also use information from the request by adding it as a parameter `#!cpp ([](const crow::request& req){...})`.<br><br>
You can also access the url parameters in the handler using `#!cpp req.url_params.get("param_name");`. If the parameter doesn't exist, `nullptr` is returned.<br><br>
If you have your own class you want to return (without converting it to string and returning that), you can use the `crow::returnable` class.<br>
to use the returnable class, you only need your class to publicly extend `crow::returnable`, add a `dump()` method that returns your class as an `std::string`, and add a constructor that has a `Content-Type` header as a string argument.<br><br>