Vue.config
is an object containing Vue’s global configurations. You can modify its properties listed below before bootstrapping your application:
Type: boolean
Default: false
Usage:
Vue.config.silent = true
Suppress all Vue logs and warnings.
Type: { [key: string]: Function }
Default: {}
Usage:
Vue.config.optionMergeStrategies._my_option = function (parent, child, vm) { return child + 1 } const Profile = Vue.extend({ _my_option: 1 }) // Profile.options._my_option = 2
Define custom merging strategies for options.
The merge strategy receives the value of that option defined on the parent and child instances as the first and second arguments, respectively. The context Vue instance is passed as the third argument.
See also: Custom Option Merging Strategies
Type: boolean
Default: true
(false
in production builds)
Usage:
// make sure to set this synchronously immediately after loading Vue Vue.config.devtools = true
Configure whether to allow vue-devtools inspection. This option’s default value is true
in development builds and false
in production builds. You can set it to true
to enable inspection for production builds.
Type: Function
Default: undefined
Usage:
Vue.config.errorHandler = function (err, vm, info) { // handle error // `info` is a Vue-specific error info, e.g. which lifecycle hook // the error was found in. Only available in 2.2.0+ }
Assign a handler for uncaught errors during component render function and watchers. The handler gets called with the error and the Vue instance.
In 2.2.0+, this hook also captures errors in component lifecycle hooks. Also, when this hook is
undefined
, captured errors will be logged withconsole.error
instead of crashing the app.In 2.4.0+ this hook also captures errors thrown inside Vue custom event handlers.
Error tracking services Sentry and Bugsnag provide official integrations using this option.
New in 2.4.0+
Type: Function
Default: undefined
Usage:
Vue.config.warnHandler = function (msg, vm, trace) { // `trace` is the component hierarchy trace }
Assign a custom handler for runtime Vue warnings. Note this only works during development and is ignored in production.
Type: Array<string | RegExp>
Default: []
Usage:
Vue.config.ignoredElements = [ 'my-custom-web-component', 'another-web-component', // Use a `RegExp` to ignore all elements that start with "ion-" // 2.5+ only /^ion-/ ]
Make Vue ignore custom elements defined outside of Vue (e.g., using the Web Components APIs). Otherwise, it will throw a warning about an Unknown custom element
, assuming that you forgot to register a global component or misspelled a component name.
Type: { [key: string]: number | Array<number> }
Default: {}
Usage:
Vue.config.keyCodes = { v: 86, f1: 112, // camelCase won`t work mediaPlayPause: 179, // instead you can use kebab-case with double quotation marks "media-play-pause": 179, up: [38, 87] }
<input type="text" @keyup.media-play-pause="method">
Define custom key alias(es) for v-on
.
New in 2.2.0+
Type: boolean
Default: false (from 2.2.3+)
Usage:
Set this to true
to enable component init, compile, render and patch performance tracing in the browser devtool timeline. Only works in development mode and in browsers that support the performance.mark API.
New in 2.2.0+
Type: boolean
Default: true
Usage:
Set this to false
to prevent the production tip on Vue startup.
Arguments:
{Object} options
Usage:
Create a “subclass” of the base Vue constructor. The argument should be an object containing component options.
The special case to note here is the data
option - it must be a function when used with Vue.extend()
.
<div id="mount-point"></div>
// create constructor var Profile = Vue.extend({ template: '<p>{{firstName}} {{lastName}} aka {{alias}}</p>', data: function () { return { firstName: 'Walter', lastName: 'White', alias: 'Heisenberg' } } }) // create an instance of Profile and mount it on an element new Profile().$mount('#mount-point')
Will result in:
<p>Walter White aka Heisenberg</p>
See also: Components
Arguments:
{Function} [callback]
{Object} [context]
Usage:
Defer the callback to be executed after the next DOM update cycle. Use it immediately after you’ve changed some data to wait for the DOM update.
// modify data vm.msg = 'Hello' // DOM not updated yet Vue.nextTick(function () { // DOM updated }) // usage as a promise (2.1.0+, see note below) Vue.nextTick() .then(function () { // DOM updated })
New in 2.1.0+: returns a Promise if no callback is provided and Promise is supported in the execution environment. Please note that Vue does not come with a Promise polyfill, so if you target browsers that don’t support Promises natively (looking at you, IE), you will have to provide a polyfill yourself.
See also: Async Update Queue
Arguments:
{Object | Array} target
{string | number} key
{any} value
Returns: the set value.
Usage:
Set a property on an object. If the object is reactive, ensure the property is created as a reactive property and trigger view updates. This is primarily used to get around the limitation that Vue cannot detect property additions.
Note the object cannot be a Vue instance, or the root data object of a Vue instance.
See also: Reactivity in Depth
Arguments:
{Object | Array} target
{string | number} key/index
Only in 2.2.0+: Also works with Array + index.
Usage:
Delete a property on an object. If the object is reactive, ensure the deletion triggers view updates. This is primarily used to get around the limitation that Vue cannot detect property deletions, but you should rarely need to use it.
The target object cannot be a Vue instance, or the root data object of a Vue instance.
See also: Reactivity in Depth
Arguments:
{string} id
{Function | Object} [definition]
Usage:
Register or retrieve a global directive.
// register Vue.directive('my-directive', { bind: function () {}, inserted: function () {}, update: function () {}, componentUpdated: function () {}, unbind: function () {} }) // register (function directive) Vue.directive('my-directive', function () { // this will be called as `bind` and `update` }) // getter, return the directive definition if registered var myDirective = Vue.directive('my-directive')
See also: Custom Directives
Arguments:
{string} id
{Function} [definition]
Usage:
Register or retrieve a global filter.
// register Vue.filter('my-filter', function (value) { // return processed value }) // getter, return the filter if registered var myFilter = Vue.filter('my-filter')
Arguments:
{string} id
{Function | Object} [definition]
Usage:
Register or retrieve a global component. Registration also automatically sets the component’s name
with the given id
.
// register an extended constructor Vue.component('my-component', Vue.extend({ /* ... */ })) // register an options object (automatically call Vue.extend) Vue.component('my-component', { /* ... */ }) // retrieve a registered component (always return constructor) var MyComponent = Vue.component('my-component')
See also: Components
Arguments:
{Object | Function} plugin
Usage:
Install a Vue.js plugin. If the plugin is an Object, it must expose an install
method. If it is a function itself, it will be treated as the install method. The install method will be called with Vue as the argument.
When this method is called on the same plugin multiple times, the plugin will be installed only once.
See also: Plugins
Arguments:
{Object} mixin
Usage:
Apply a mixin globally, which affects every Vue instance created afterwards. This can be used by plugin authors to inject custom behavior into components. Not recommended in application code.
See also: Global Mixin
Arguments:
{string} template
Usage:
Compiles a template string into a render function. Only available in the full build.
var res = Vue.compile('<div><span>{{ msg }}</span></div>') new Vue({ data: { msg: 'hello' }, render: res.render, staticRenderFns: res.staticRenderFns })
See also: Render Functions
Details: Provides the installed version of Vue as a string. This is especially useful for community plugins and components, where you might use different strategies for different versions.
Usage:
var version = Number(Vue.version.split('.')[0]) if (version === 2) { // Vue v2.x.x } else if (version === 1) { // Vue v1.x.x } else { // Unsupported versions of Vue }
Type: Object | Function
Restriction: Only accepts Function
when used in a component definition.
Details:
The data object for the Vue instance. Vue will recursively convert its properties into getter/setters to make it “reactive”. The object must be plain: native objects such as browser API objects and prototype properties are ignored. A rule of thumb is that data should just be data - it is not recommended to observe objects with their own stateful behavior.
Once observed, you can no longer add reactive properties to the root data object. It is therefore recommended to declare all root-level reactive properties upfront, before creating the instance.
After the instance is created, the original data object can be accessed as vm.$data
. The Vue instance also proxies all the properties found on the data object, so vm.a
will be equivalent to vm.$data.a
.
Properties that start with _
or $
will not be proxied on the Vue instance because they may conflict with Vue’s internal properties and API methods. You will have to access them as vm.$data._property
.
When defining a component, data
must be declared as a function that returns the initial data object, because there will be many instances created using the same definition. If we use a plain object for data
, that same object will be shared by reference across all instances created! By providing a data
function, every time a new instance is created we can call it to return a fresh copy of the initial data.
If required, a deep clone of the original object can be obtained by passing vm.$data
through JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(...))
.
Example:
var data = { a: 1 } // direct instance creation var vm = new Vue({ data: data }) vm.a // => 1 vm.$data === data // => true // must use function when in Vue.extend() var Component = Vue.extend({ data: function () { return { a: 1 } } })
Note that you should not use an arrow function with the data
property (e.g. data: () => { return { a: this.myProp }}
). The reason is arrow functions bind the parent context, so this
will not be the Vue instance as you expect and this.myProp
will be undefined.
See also: Reactivity in Depth
Type: Array<string> | Object
Details:
A list/hash of attributes that are exposed to accept data from the parent component. It has an Array-based simple syntax and an alternative Object-based syntax that allows advanced configurations such as type checking, custom validation and default values.
Example:
// simple syntax Vue.component('props-demo-simple', { props: ['size', 'myMessage'] }) // object syntax with validation Vue.component('props-demo-advanced', { props: { // type check height: Number, // type check plus other validations age: { type: Number, default: 0, required: true, validator: function (value) { return value >= 0 } } } })
See also: Props
Type: { [key: string]: any }
Restriction: only respected in instance creation via new
.
Details:
Pass props to an instance during its creation. This is primarily intended to make unit testing easier.
Example:
var Comp = Vue.extend({ props: ['msg'], template: '<div>{{ msg }}</div>' }) var vm = new Comp({ propsData: { msg: 'hello' } })
Type: { [key: string]: Function | { get: Function, set: Function } }
Details:
Computed properties to be mixed into the Vue instance. All getters and setters have their this
context automatically bound to the Vue instance.
Note that you should not use an arrow function to define a computed property (e.g. aDouble: () => this.a * 2
). The reason is arrow functions bind the parent context, so this
will not be the Vue instance as you expect and this.a
will be undefined.
Computed properties are cached, and only re-computed on reactive dependency changes. Note that if a certain dependency is out of the instance’s scope (i.e. not reactive), the computed property will not be updated.
Example:
var vm = new Vue({ data: { a: 1 }, computed: { // get only aDouble: function () { return this.a * 2 }, // both get and set aPlus: { get: function () { return this.a + 1 }, set: function (v) { this.a = v - 1 } } } }) vm.aPlus // => 2 vm.aPlus = 3 vm.a // => 2 vm.aDouble // => 4
See also: Computed Properties
Type: { [key: string]: Function }
Details:
Methods to be mixed into the Vue instance. You can access these methods directly on the VM instance, or use them in directive expressions. All methods will have their this
context automatically bound to the Vue instance.
Note that you should not use an arrow function to define a method (e.g. plus: () => this.a++
). The reason is arrow functions bind the parent context, so this
will not be the Vue instance as you expect and this.a
will be undefined.
Example:
var vm = new Vue({ data: { a: 1 }, methods: { plus: function () { this.a++ } } }) vm.plus() vm.a // 2
See also: Event Handling
Type: { [key: string]: string | Function | Object }
Details:
An object where keys are expressions to watch and values are the corresponding callbacks. The value can also be a string of a method name, or an Object that contains additional options. The Vue instance will call $watch()
for each entry in the object at instantiation.
Example:
var vm = new Vue({ data: { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, d: 4 }, watch: { a: function (val, oldVal) { console.log('new: %s, old: %s', val, oldVal) }, // string method name b: 'someMethod', // deep watcher c: { handler: function (val, oldVal) { /* ... */ }, deep: true }, // the callback will be called immediately after the start of the observation d: { handler: function (val, oldVal) { /* ... */ }, immediate: true } } }) vm.a = 2 // => new: 2, old: 1
Note that you should not use an arrow function to define a watcher (e.g. searchQuery: newValue => this.updateAutocomplete(newValue)
). The reason is arrow functions bind the parent context, so this
will not be the Vue instance as you expect and this.updateAutocomplete
will be undefined.
See also: Instance Methods / Data - vm.$watch
Type: string | HTMLElement
Restriction: only respected in instance creation via new
.
Details:
Provide the Vue instance an existing DOM element to mount on. It can be a CSS selector string or an actual HTMLElement.
After the instance is mounted, the resolved element will be accessible as vm.$el
.
If this option is available at instantiation, the instance will immediately enter compilation; otherwise, the user will have to explicitly call vm.$mount()
to manually start the compilation.
The provided element merely serves as a mounting point. Unlike in Vue 1.x, the mounted element will be replaced with Vue-generated DOM in all cases. It is therefore not recommended to mount the root instance to <html>
or <body>
.
If neither render
function nor template
option is present, the in-DOM HTML of the mounting DOM element will be extracted as the template. In this case, Runtime + Compiler build of Vue should be used.
See also:
Type: string
Details:
A string template to be used as the markup for the Vue instance. The template will replace the mounted element. Any existing markup inside the mounted element will be ignored, unless content distribution slots are present in the template.
If the string starts with #
it will be used as a querySelector and use the selected element’s innerHTML as the template string. This allows the use of the common <script type="x-template">
trick to include templates.
From a security perspective, you should only use Vue templates that you can trust. Never use user-generated content as your template.
If render function is present in the Vue option, the template will be ignored.
See also:
Type: (createElement: () => VNode) => VNode
Details:
An alternative to string templates allowing you to leverage the full programmatic power of JavaScript. The render function receives a createElement
method as it’s first argument used to create VNode
s.
If the component is a functional component, the render function also receives an extra argument context
, which provides access to contextual data since functional components are instance-less.
The render
function has priority over the render function compiled from template
option or in-DOM HTML template of the mounting element which is specified by the el
option.
See also: Render Functions
New in 2.2.0+
Type: (createElement: () => VNode, error: Error) => VNode
Details:
Only works in development mode.
Provide an alternative render output when the default render
function encounters an error. The error will be passed to renderError
as the second argument. This is particularly useful when used together with hot-reload.
Example:
new Vue({ render (h) { throw new Error('oops') }, renderError (h, err) { return h('pre', { style: { color: 'red' }}, err.stack) } }).$mount('#app')
See also: Render Functions
All lifecycle hooks automatically have their this
context bound to the instance, so that you can access data, computed properties, and methods. This means you should not use an arrow function to define a lifecycle method (e.g. created: () => this.fetchTodos()
). The reason is arrow functions bind the parent context, so this
will not be the Vue instance as you expect and this.fetchTodos
will be undefined.
Type: Function
Details:
Called synchronously immediately after the instance has been initialized, before data observation and event/watcher setup.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called synchronously after the instance is created. At this stage, the instance has finished processing the options which means the following have been set up: data observation, computed properties, methods, watch/event callbacks. However, the mounting phase has not been started, and the $el
property will not be available yet.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called right before the mounting begins: the render
function is about to be called for the first time.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called after the instance has been mounted, where el
is replaced by the newly created vm.$el
. If the root instance is mounted to an in-document element, vm.$el
will also be in-document when mounted
is called.
Note that mounted
does not guarantee that all child components have also been mounted. If you want to wait until the entire view has been rendered, you can use vm.$nextTick inside of mounted
:
mounted: function () { this.$nextTick(function () { // Code that will run only after the // entire view has been rendered }) }
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called when the data changes, before the virtual DOM is re-rendered and patched.
You can perform further state changes in this hook and they will not trigger additional re-renders.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called after a data change causes the virtual DOM to be re-rendered and patched.
The component’s DOM will have been updated when this hook is called, so you can perform DOM-dependent operations here. However, in most cases you should avoid changing state inside the hook. To react to state changes, it’s usually better to use a computed property or watcher instead.
Note that updated
does not guarantee that all child components have also been re-rendered. If you want to wait until the entire view has been re-rendered, you can use vm.$nextTick inside of updated
:
updated: function () { this.$nextTick(function () { // Code that will run only after the // entire view has been re-rendered }) }
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called when a kept-alive component is activated.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also:
Type: Function
Details:
Called when a kept-alive component is deactivated.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also:
Type: Function
Details:
Called right before a Vue instance is destroyed. At this stage the instance is still fully functional.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Type: Function
Details:
Called after a Vue instance has been destroyed. When this hook is called, all directives of the Vue instance have been unbound, all event listeners have been removed, and all child Vue instances have also been destroyed.
This hook is not called during server-side rendering.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
New in 2.5.0+
Type: (err: Error, vm: Component, info: string) => ?boolean
Details:
Called when an error from any descendent component is captured. The hook receives three arguments: the error, the component instance that triggered the error, and a string containing information on where the error was captured. The hook can return false
to stop the error from propagating further.
You can modify component state in this hook. However, it is important to have conditionals in your template or render function that short circuits other content when an error has been captured; otherwise the component will be thrown into an infinite render loop.
Error Propagation Rules
By default, all errors are still sent to the global config.errorHandler
if it is defined, so that these errors can still be reported to an analytics service in a single place.
If multiple errorCaptured
hooks exist on a component’s inheritance chain or parent chain, all of them will be invoked on the same error.
If the errorCaptured
hook itself throws an error, both this error and the original captured error are sent to the global config.errorHandler
.
An errorCaptured
hook can return false
to prevent the error from propagating further. This is essentially saying “this error has been handled and should be ignored.” It will prevent any additional errorCaptured
hooks or the global config.errorHandler
from being invoked for this error.
Type: Object
Details:
A hash of directives to be made available to the Vue instance.
See also: Custom Directives
Type: Object
Details:
A hash of filters to be made available to the Vue instance.
See also: Vue.filter
Type: Object
Details:
A hash of components to be made available to the Vue instance.
See also: Components
Type: Vue instance
Details:
Specify the parent instance for the instance to be created. Establishes a parent-child relationship between the two. The parent will be accessible as this.$parent
for the child, and the child will be pushed into the parent’s $children
array.
Use $parent
and $children
sparingly - they mostly serve as an escape-hatch. Prefer using props and events for parent-child communication.
Type: Array<Object>
Details:
The mixins
option accepts an array of mixin objects. These mixin objects can contain instance options like normal instance objects, and they will be merged against the eventual options using the same option merging logic in Vue.extend()
. e.g. If your mixin contains a created hook and the component itself also has one, both functions will be called.
Mixin hooks are called in the order they are provided, and called before the component’s own hooks.
Example:
var mixin = { created: function () { console.log(1) } } var vm = new Vue({ created: function () { console.log(2) }, mixins: [mixin] }) // => 1 // => 2
See also: Mixins
Type: Object | Function
Details:
Allows declaratively extending another component (could be either a plain options object or a constructor) without having to use Vue.extend
. This is primarily intended to make it easier to extend between single file components.
This is similar to mixins
, the difference being that the component’s own options takes higher priority than the source component being extended.
Example:
var CompA = { ... } // extend CompA without having to call `Vue.extend` on either var CompB = { extends: CompA, ... }
New in 2.2.0+
Type:
Object | () => Object
Array<string> | { [key: string]: string | Symbol | Object }
Details:
provide
and inject
are primarily provided for advanced plugin / component library use cases. It is NOT recommended to use them in generic application code.
This pair of options are used together to allow an ancestor component to serve as a dependency injector for its all descendants, regardless of how deep the component hierarchy is, as long as they are in the same parent chain. If you are familiar with React, this is very similar to React’s context feature.
The provide
option should be an object or a function that returns an object. This object contains the properties that are available for injection into its descendants. You can use ES2015 Symbols as keys in this object, but only in environments that natively support Symbol
and Reflect.ownKeys
.
The inject
options should be either an Array of strings or an object where the keys stand for the local binding name, and the value being the key (string or Symbol) to search for in available injections.
Note: the
provide
andinject
bindings are NOT reactive. This is intentional. However, if you pass down an observed object, properties on that object do remain reactive.
Example:
var Provider = { provide: { foo: 'bar' }, // ... } var Child = { inject: ['foo'], created () { console.log(this.foo) // => "bar" } // ... }
With ES2015 Symbols, function provide
and object inject
:
const s = Symbol() const Provider = { provide () { return { [s]: 'foo' } } } const Child = { inject: { s }, // ... }
The next 2 examples work with Vue 2.2.1+. Below that version, injected values were resolved after the
props
and thedata
initialization.
Using an injected value as the default for a prop:
const Child = { inject: ['foo'], props: { bar: { default () { return this.foo } } } }
Using an injected value as data entry:
const Child = { inject: ['foo'], data () { return { bar: this.foo } } }
In 2.5.0+ injections can be optional with default value:
const Child = { inject: { foo: { default: 'foo' } } }
If it needs to be injected from a property with a different name, use from
to denote the source property:
const Child = { inject: { foo: { from: 'bar', default: 'foo' } } }
Similar to prop defaults, you need to use a factory function for non primitive values:
const Child = { inject: { foo: { from: 'bar', default: () => [1, 2, 3] } } }
Type: string
Restriction: only respected when used as a component option.
Details:
Allow the component to recursively invoke itself in its template. Note that when a component is registered globally with Vue.component()
, the global ID is automatically set as its name.
Another benefit of specifying a name
option is debugging. Named components result in more helpful warning messages. Also, when inspecting an app in the vue-devtools, unnamed components will show up as <AnonymousComponent>
, which isn’t very informative. By providing the name
option, you will get a much more informative component tree.
Type: Array<string>
Default: ["{{", "}}"]
Restrictions: This option is only available in the full build, with in-browser compilation.
Details:
Change the plain text interpolation delimiters.
Example:
new Vue({ delimiters: ['${', '}'] }) // Delimiters changed to ES6 template string style
Type: boolean
Details:
Causes a component to be stateless (no data
) and instanceless (no this
context). They are only a render
function that returns virtual nodes making them much cheaper to render.
See also: Functional Components
New in 2.2.0
Type: { prop?: string, event?: string }
Details:
Allows a custom component to customize the prop and event used when it’s used with v-model
. By default, v-model
on a component uses value
as the prop and input
as the event, but some input types such as checkboxes and radio buttons may want to use the value
prop for a different purpose. Using the model
option can avoid the conflict in such cases.
Example:
Vue.component('my-checkbox', { model: { prop: 'checked', event: 'change' }, props: { // this allows using the `value` prop for a different purpose value: String, // use `checked` as the prop which take the place of `value` checked: { type: Number, default: 0 } }, // ... })
<my-checkbox v-model="foo" value="some value"></my-checkbox>
The above will be equivalent to:
<my-checkbox :checked="foo" @change="val => { foo = val }" value="some value"> </my-checkbox>
New in 2.4.0+
Type: boolean
Default: true
Details:
By default, parent scope attribute bindings that are not recognized as props will “fallthrough” and be applied to the root element of the child component as normal HTML attributes. When authoring a component that wraps a target element or another component, this may not always be the desired behavior. By setting inheritAttrs
to false
, this default behavior can be disabled. The attributes are available via the $attrs
instance property (also new in 2.4) and can be explicitly bound to a non-root element using v-bind
.
Note: this option does not affect class
and style
bindings.
New in 2.4.0+
Type: boolean
Default: false
Restrictions: This option is only available in the full build, with in-browser compilation.
Details:
When set to true
, will preserve and render HTML comments found in templates. The default behavior is discarding them.
Type: Object
Details:
The data object that the Vue instance is observing. The Vue instance proxies access to the properties on its data object.
See also: Options / Data - data
New in 2.2.0+
Type: Object
Details:
An object representing the current props a component has received. The Vue instance proxies access to the properties on its props object.
Type: HTMLElement
Read only
Details:
The root DOM element that the Vue instance is managing.
Type: Object
Read only
Details:
The instantiation options used for the current Vue instance. This is useful when you want to include custom properties in the options:
new Vue({ customOption: 'foo', created: function () { console.log(this.$options.customOption) // => 'foo' } })
Type: Vue instance
Read only
Details:
The parent instance, if the current instance has one.
Type: Vue instance
Read only
Details:
The root Vue instance of the current component tree. If the current instance has no parents this value will be itself.
Type: Array<Vue instance>
Read only
Details:
The direct child components of the current instance. Note there’s no order guarantee for $children
, and it is not reactive. If you find yourself trying to use $children
for data binding, consider using an Array and v-for
to generate child components, and use the Array as the source of truth.
Type: { [name: string]: ?Array<VNode> }
Read only
Details:
Used to programmatically access content distributed by slots. Each named slot has its own corresponding property (e.g. the contents of slot="foo"
will be found at vm.$slots.foo
). The default
property contains any nodes not included in a named slot.
Accessing vm.$slots
is most useful when writing a component with a render function.
Example:
<blog-post> <h1 slot="header"> About Me </h1> <p>Here's some page content, which will be included in vm.$slots.default, because it's not inside a named slot.</p> <p slot="footer"> Copyright 2016 Evan You </p> <p>If I have some content down here, it will also be included in vm.$slots.default.</p>. </blog-post>
Vue.component('blog-post', { render: function (createElement) { var header = this.$slots.header var body = this.$slots.default var footer = this.$slots.footer return createElement('div', [ createElement('header', header), createElement('main', body), createElement('footer', footer) ]) } })
See also:
New in 2.1.0+
Type: { [name: string]: props => VNode | Array<VNode> }
Read only
Details:
Used to programmatically access scoped slots. For each slot, including the default
one, the object contains a corresponding function that returns VNodes.
Accessing vm.$scopedSlots
is most useful when writing a component with a render function.
See also:
Type: Object
Read only
Details:
An object that holds child components that have ref
registered.
See also:
Type: boolean
Read only
Details:
Whether the current Vue instance is running on the server.
See also: Server-Side Rendering
Type: { [key: string]: string }
Read only
Details:
Contains parent-scope attribute bindings (except for class
and style
) that are not recognized (and extracted) as props. When a component doesn’t have any declared props, this essentially contains all parent-scope bindings (except for class
and style
), and can be passed down to an inner component via v-bind="$attrs"
- useful when creating higher-order components.
Type: { [key: string]: Function | Array<Function> }
Read only
Details:
Contains parent-scope v-on
event listeners (without .native
modifiers). This can be passed down to an inner component via v-on="$listeners"
- useful when creating higher-order components.
Arguments:
{string | Function} expOrFn
{Function | Object} callback
{Object} [options]
{boolean} deep
{boolean} immediate
Returns: {Function} unwatch
Usage:
Watch an expression or a computed function on the Vue instance for changes. The callback gets called with the new value and the old value. The expression only accepts dot-delimited paths. For more complex expressions, use a function instead.
Note: when mutating (rather than replacing) an Object or an Array, the old value will be the same as new value because they reference the same Object/Array. Vue doesn’t keep a copy of the pre-mutate value.
Example:
// keypath vm.$watch('a.b.c', function (newVal, oldVal) { // do something }) // function vm.$watch( function () { return this.a + this.b }, function (newVal, oldVal) { // do something } )
vm.$watch
returns an unwatch function that stops firing the callback:
var unwatch = vm.$watch('a', cb) // later, teardown the watcher unwatch()
Option: deep
To also detect nested value changes inside Objects, you need to pass in deep: true
in the options argument. Note that you don’t need to do so to listen for Array mutations.
vm.$watch('someObject', callback, { deep: true }) vm.someObject.nestedValue = 123 // callback is fired
Option: immediate
Passing in immediate: true
in the option will trigger the callback immediately with the current value of the expression:
vm.$watch('a', callback, { immediate: true }) // `callback` is fired immediately with current value of `a`
Arguments:
{Object | Array} target
{string | number} key
{any} value
Returns: the set value.
Usage:
This is the alias of the global Vue.set
.
See also: Vue.set
Arguments:
{Object | Array} target
{string | number} key
Usage:
This is the alias of the global Vue.delete
.
See also: Vue.delete
Arguments:
{string | Array<string>} event
(array only supported in 2.2.0+){Function} callback
Usage:
Listen for a custom event on the current vm. Events can be triggered by vm.$emit
. The callback will receive all the additional arguments passed into these event-triggering methods.
Example:
vm.$on('test', function (msg) { console.log(msg) }) vm.$emit('test', 'hi') // => "hi"
Arguments:
{string} event
{Function} callback
Usage:
Listen for a custom event, but only once. The listener will be removed once it triggers for the first time.
Arguments:
{string | Array<string>} event
(array only supported in 2.2.2+){Function} [callback]
Usage:
Remove custom event listener(s).
If no arguments are provided, remove all event listeners;
If only the event is provided, remove all listeners for that event;
If both event and callback are given, remove the listener for that specific callback only.
Arguments:
{string} event
[...args]
Trigger an event on the current instance. Any additional arguments will be passed into the listener’s callback function.
Arguments:
{Element | string} [elementOrSelector]
{boolean} [hydrating]
Returns: vm
- the instance itself
Usage:
If a Vue instance didn’t receive the el
option at instantiation, it will be in “unmounted” state, without an associated DOM element. vm.$mount()
can be used to manually start the mounting of an unmounted Vue instance.
If elementOrSelector
argument is not provided, the template will be rendered as an off-document element, and you will have to use native DOM API to insert it into the document yourself.
The method returns the instance itself so you can chain other instance methods after it.
Example:
var MyComponent = Vue.extend({ template: '<div>Hello!</div>' }) // create and mount to #app (will replace #app) new MyComponent().$mount('#app') // the above is the same as: new MyComponent({ el: '#app' }) // or, render off-document and append afterwards: var component = new MyComponent().$mount() document.getElementById('app').appendChild(component.$el)
See also:
Usage:
Force the Vue instance to re-render. Note it does not affect all child components, only the instance itself and child components with inserted slot content.
Arguments:
{Function} [callback]
Usage:
Defer the callback to be executed after the next DOM update cycle. Use it immediately after you’ve changed some data to wait for the DOM update. This is the same as the global Vue.nextTick
, except that the callback’s this
context is automatically bound to the instance calling this method.
New in 2.1.0+: returns a Promise if no callback is provided and Promise is supported in the execution environment. Please note that Vue does not come with a Promise polyfill, so if you target browsers that don’t support Promises natively (looking at you, IE), you will have to provide a polyfill yourself.
Example:
new Vue({ // ... methods: { // ... example: function () { // modify data this.message = 'changed' // DOM is not updated yet this.$nextTick(function () { // DOM is now updated // `this` is bound to the current instance this.doSomethingElse() }) } } })
See also:
Usage:
Completely destroy a vm. Clean up its connections with other existing vms, unbind all its directives, turn off all event listeners.
Triggers the beforeDestroy
and destroyed
hooks.
In normal use cases you shouldn’t have to call this method yourself. Prefer controlling the lifecycle of child components in a data-driven fashion using v-if
and v-for
.
See also: Lifecycle Diagram
Expects: string
Details:
Updates the element’s textContent
. If you need to update the part of textContent
, you should use {{ Mustache }}
interpolations.
Example:
<span v-text="msg"></span> <!-- same as --> <span>{{msg}}</span>
See also: Data Binding Syntax - Interpolations
Expects: string
Details:
Updates the element’s innerHTML
. Note that the contents are inserted as plain HTML - they will not be compiled as Vue templates. If you find yourself trying to compose templates using v-html
, try to rethink the solution by using components instead.
Dynamically rendering arbitrary HTML on your website can be very dangerous because it can easily lead to XSS attacks. Only use v-html
on trusted content and never on user-provided content.
In single-file components, scoped
styles will not apply to content inside v-html
, because that HTML is not processed by Vue’s template compiler. If you want to target v-html
content with scoped CSS, you can instead use CSS modules or an additional, global <style>
element with a manual scoping strategy such as BEM.
Example:
<div v-html="html"></div>
See also: Data Binding Syntax - Interpolations
Expects: any
Usage:
Toggle’s the element’s display
CSS property based on the truthy-ness of the expression value.
This directive triggers transitions when its condition changes.
See also: Conditional Rendering - v-show
Expects: any
Usage:
Conditionally render the element based on the truthy-ness of the expression value. The element and its contained directives / components are destroyed and re-constructed during toggles. If the element is a <template>
element, its content will be extracted as the conditional block.
This directive triggers transitions when its condition changes.
When used together with v-if, v-for has a higher priority than v-if. See the list rendering guide for details.
See also: Conditional Rendering - v-if
Does not expect expression
Restriction: previous sibling element must have v-if
or v-else-if
.
Usage:
Denote the “else block” for v-if
or a v-if
/v-else-if
chain.
<div v-if="Math.random() > 0.5"> Now you see me </div> <div v-else> Now you don't </div>
See also: Conditional Rendering - v-else
New in 2.1.0+
Expects: any
Restriction: previous sibling element must have v-if
or v-else-if
.
Usage:
Denote the “else if block” for v-if
. Can be chained.
<div v-if="type === 'A'"> A </div> <div v-else-if="type === 'B'"> B </div> <div v-else-if="type === 'C'"> C </div> <div v-else> Not A/B/C </div>
See also: Conditional Rendering - v-else-if
Expects: Array | Object | number | string
Usage:
Render the element or template block multiple times based on the source data. The directive’s value must use the special syntax alias in expression
to provide an alias for the current element being iterated on:
<div v-for="item in items"> {{ item.text }} </div>
Alternatively, you can also specify an alias for the index (or the key if used on an Object):
<div v-for="(item, index) in items"></div> <div v-for="(val, key) in object"></div> <div v-for="(val, key, index) in object"></div>
The default behavior of v-for
will try to patch the elements in-place without moving them. To force it to reorder elements, you need to provide an ordering hint with the key
special attribute:
<div v-for="item in items" :key="item.id"> {{ item.text }} </div>
When used together with v-if, v-for has a higher priority than v-if. See the list rendering guide for details.
The detailed usage for v-for
is explained in the guide section linked below.
See also:
Shorthand: @
Expects: Function | Inline Statement | Object
Argument: event
Modifiers:
.stop
- call event.stopPropagation()
..prevent
- call event.preventDefault()
..capture
- add event listener in capture mode..self
- only trigger handler if event was dispatched from this element..{keyCode | keyAlias}
- only trigger handler on certain keys..native
- listen for a native event on the root element of component..once
- trigger handler at most once..left
- (2.2.0+) only trigger handler for left button mouse events..right
- (2.2.0+) only trigger handler for right button mouse events..middle
- (2.2.0+) only trigger handler for middle button mouse events..passive
- (2.3.0+) attaches a DOM event with { passive: true }
.Usage:
Attaches an event listener to the element. The event type is denoted by the argument. The expression can be a method name, an inline statement, or omitted if there are modifiers present.
Starting in 2.4.0+, v-on
also supports binding to an object of event/listener pairs without an argument. Note when using the object syntax, it does not support any modifiers.
When used on a normal element, it listens to native DOM events only. When used on a custom element component, it also listens to custom events emitted on that child component.
When listening to native DOM events, the method receives the native event as the only argument. If using inline statement, the statement has access to the special $event
property: v-on:click="handle('ok', $event)"
.
Example:
<!-- method handler --> <button v-on:click="doThis"></button> <!-- object syntax (2.4.0+) --> <button v-on="{ mousedown: doThis, mouseup: doThat }"></button> <!-- inline statement --> <button v-on:click="doThat('hello', $event)"></button> <!-- shorthand --> <button @click="doThis"></button> <!-- stop propagation --> <button @click.stop="doThis"></button> <!-- prevent default --> <button @click.prevent="doThis"></button> <!-- prevent default without expression --> <form @submit.prevent></form> <!-- chain modifiers --> <button @click.stop.prevent="doThis"></button> <!-- key modifier using keyAlias --> <input @keyup.enter="onEnter"> <!-- key modifier using keyCode --> <input @keyup.13="onEnter"> <!-- the click event will be triggered at most once --> <button v-on:click.once="doThis"></button>
Listening to custom events on a child component (the handler is called when “my-event” is emitted on the child):
<my-component @my-event="handleThis"></my-component> <!-- inline statement --> <my-component @my-event="handleThis(123, $event)"></my-component> <!-- native event on component --> <my-component @click.native="onClick"></my-component>
See also:
Shorthand: :
Expects: any (with argument) | Object (without argument)
Argument: attrOrProp (optional)
Modifiers:
.prop
- Bind as a DOM property instead of an attribute (what’s the difference?). If the tag is a component then .prop
will set the property on the component’s $el
..camel
- (2.1.0+) transform the kebab-case attribute name into camelCase..sync
- (2.3.0+) a syntax sugar that expands into a v-on
handler for updating the bound value.Usage:
Dynamically bind one or more attributes, or a component prop to an expression.
When used to bind the class
or style
attribute, it supports additional value types such as Array or Objects. See linked guide section below for more details.
When used for prop binding, the prop must be properly declared in the child component.
When used without an argument, can be used to bind an object containing attribute name-value pairs. Note in this mode class
and style
does not support Array or Objects.
Example:
<!-- bind an attribute --> <img v-bind:src="imageSrc"> <!-- shorthand --> <img :src="imageSrc"> <!-- with inline string concatenation --> <img :src="'/path/to/images/' + fileName"> <!-- class binding --> <div :class="{ red: isRed }"></div> <div :class="[classA, classB]"></div> <div :class="[classA, { classB: isB, classC: isC }]"> <!-- style binding --> <div :style="{ fontSize: size + 'px' }"></div> <div :style="[styleObjectA, styleObjectB]"></div> <!-- binding an object of attributes --> <div v-bind="{ id: someProp, 'other-attr': otherProp }"></div> <!-- DOM attribute binding with prop modifier --> <div v-bind:text-content.prop="text"></div> <!-- prop binding. "prop" must be declared in my-component. --> <my-component :prop="someThing"></my-component> <!-- pass down parent props in common with a child component --> <child-component v-bind="$props"></child-component> <!-- XLink --> <svg><a :xlink:special="foo"></a></svg>
The .camel
modifier allows camelizing a v-bind
attribute name when using in-DOM templates, e.g. the SVG viewBox
attribute:
<svg :view-box.camel="viewBox"></svg>
.camel
is not needed if you are using string templates, or compiling with vue-loader
/vueify
.
See also:
Expects: varies based on value of form inputs element or output of components
Limited to:
<input>
<select>
<textarea>
Modifiers:
Usage:
Create a two-way binding on a form input element or a component. For detailed usage and other notes, see the Guide section linked below.
See also:
Does not expect expression
Usage:
Skip compilation for this element and all its children. You can use this for displaying raw mustache tags. Skipping large numbers of nodes with no directives on them can also speed up compilation.
Example:
<span v-pre>{{ this will not be compiled }}</span>
Does not expect expression
Usage:
This directive will remain on the element until the associated Vue instance finishes compilation. Combined with CSS rules such as [v-cloak] { display: none }
, this directive can be used to hide un-compiled mustache bindings until the Vue instance is ready.
Example:
[v-cloak] { display: none; }
<div v-cloak> {{ message }} </div>
The <div>
will not be visible until the compilation is done.
Does not expect expression
Details:
Render the element and component once only. On subsequent re-renders, the element/component and all its children will be treated as static content and skipped. This can be used to optimize update performance.
<!-- single element --> <span v-once>This will never change: {{msg}}</span> <!-- the element have children --> <div v-once> <h1>comment</h1> <p>{{msg}}</p> </div> <!-- component --> <my-component v-once :comment="msg"></my-component> <!-- `v-for` directive --> <ul> <li v-for="i in list" v-once>{{i}}</li> </ul>
See also:
Expects: number | string
The key
special attribute is primarily used as a hint for Vue’s virtual DOM algorithm to identify VNodes when diffing the new list of nodes against the old list. Without keys, Vue uses an algorithm that minimizes element movement and tries to patch/reuse elements of the same type in-place as much as possible. With keys, it will reorder elements based on the order change of keys, and elements with keys that are no longer present will always be removed/destroyed.
Children of the same common parent must have unique keys. Duplicate keys will cause render errors.
The most common use case is combined with v-for
:
<ul> <li v-for="item in items" :key="item.id">...</li> </ul>
It can also be used to force replacement of an element/component instead of reusing it. This can be useful when you want to:
For example:
<transition> <span :key="text">{{ text }}</span> </transition>
When text
changes, the <span>
will always be replaced instead of patched, so a transition will be triggered.
Expects: string
ref
is used to register a reference to an element or a child component. The reference will be registered under the parent component’s $refs
object. If used on a plain DOM element, the reference will be that element; if used on a child component, the reference will be component instance:
<!-- vm.$refs.p will be the DOM node --> <p ref="p">hello</p> <!-- vm.$refs.child will be the child comp instance --> <child-comp ref="child"></child-comp>
When used on elements/components with v-for
, the registered reference will be an Array containing DOM nodes or component instances.
An important note about the ref registration timing: because the refs themselves are created as a result of the render function, you cannot access them on the initial render - they don’t exist yet! $refs
is also non-reactive, therefore you should not attempt to use it in templates for data-binding.
See also: Child Component Refs
Expects: string
Used on content inserted into child components to indicate which named slot the content belongs to.
For detailed usage, see the guide section linked below.
See also: Named Slots
New in 2.5.0+
Expects: function argument expression
Usage:
Used to denote an element or component as a scoped slot. The attribute’s value should be a valid JavaScript expression that can appear in the argument position of a function signature. This means in supported environments you can also use ES2015 destructuring in the expression. Serves as a replacement for scope
in 2.5.0+.
This attribute does not support dynamic binding.
See also: Scoped Slots
Used to denote a <template>
element as a scoped slot, which is replaced by slot-scope
in 2.5.0+.
Usage:
Same as slot-scope
except that scope
can only be used on <template>
elements.
Expects: string
Used for dynamic components and to work around limitations of in-DOM templates.
For example:
<!-- component changes when currentView changes --> <component v-bind:is="currentView"></component> <!-- necessary because `<my-row>` would be invalid inside --> <!-- a `<table>` element and so would be hoisted out --> <table> <tr is="my-row"></tr> </table>
For detailed usage, follow the links in the description above.
See also:
Props:
is
- string | ComponentDefinition | ComponentConstructorinline-template
- booleanUsage:
A “meta component” for rendering dynamic components. The actual component to render is determined by the is
prop:
<!-- a dynamic component controlled by --> <!-- the `componentId` property on the vm --> <component :is="componentId"></component> <!-- can also render registered component or component passed as prop --> <component :is="$options.components.child"></component>
See also: Dynamic Components
Props:
name
- string, Used to automatically generate transition CSS class names. e.g. name: 'fade'
will auto expand to .fade-enter
, .fade-enter-active
, etc. Defaults to "v"
.appear
- boolean, Whether to apply transition on initial render. Defaults to false
.css
- boolean, Whether to apply CSS transition classes. Defaults to true
. If set to false
, will only trigger JavaScript hooks registered via component events.type
- string, Specify the type of transition events to wait for to determine transition end timing. Available values are "transition"
and "animation"
. By default, it will automatically detect the type that has a longer duration.mode
- string, Controls the timing sequence of leaving/entering transitions. Available modes are "out-in"
and "in-out"
; defaults to simultaneous.enter-class
- stringleave-class
- stringappear-class
- stringenter-to-class
- stringleave-to-class
- stringappear-to-class
- stringenter-active-class
- stringleave-active-class
- stringappear-active-class
- stringEvents:
before-enter
before-leave
before-appear
enter
leave
appear
after-enter
after-leave
after-appear
enter-cancelled
leave-cancelled
(v-show
only)appear-cancelled
Usage:
<transition>
serve as transition effects for single element/component. The <transition>
only applies the transition behavior to the wrapped content inside; it doesn’t render an extra DOM element, or show up in the inspected component hierarchy.
<!-- simple element --> <transition> <div v-if="ok">toggled content</div> </transition> <!-- dynamic component --> <transition name="fade" mode="out-in" appear> <component :is="view"></component> </transition> <!-- event hooking --> <div id="transition-demo"> <transition @after-enter="transitionComplete"> <div v-show="ok">toggled content</div> </transition> </div>
new Vue({ ... methods: { transitionComplete: function (el) { // for passed 'el' that DOM element as the argument, something ... } } ... }).$mount('#transition-demo')
Props:
tag
- string, defaults to span
.move-class
- overwrite CSS class applied during moving transition.<transition>
except mode
.Events:
<transition>
.Usage:
<transition-group>
serve as transition effects for multiple elements/components. The <transition-group>
renders a real DOM element. By default it renders a <span>
, and you can configure what element is should render via the tag
attribute.
Note every child in a <transition-group>
must be uniquely keyed for the animations to work properly.
<transition-group>
supports moving transitions via CSS transform. When a child’s position on screen has changed after an updated, it will get applied a moving CSS class (auto generated from the name
attribute or configured with the move-class
attribute). If the CSS transform
property is “transition-able” when the moving class is applied, the element will be smoothly animated to its destination using the FLIP technique.
<transition-group tag="ul" name="slide"> <li v-for="item in items" :key="item.id"> {{ item.text }} </li> </transition-group>
Props:
include
- string or RegExp or Array. Only components matched by this will be cached.exclude
- string or RegExp or Array. Any component matched by this will not be cached.Usage:
When wrapped around a dynamic component, <keep-alive>
caches the inactive component instances without destroying them. Similar to <transition>
, <keep-alive>
is an abstract component: it doesn’t render a DOM element itself, and doesn’t show up in the component parent chain.
When a component is toggled inside <keep-alive>
, its activated
and deactivated
lifecycle hooks will be invoked accordingly.
In 2.2.0+ and above,
activated
anddeactivated
will fire for all nested components inside a<keep-alive>
tree.
Primarily used with preserve component state or avoid re-rendering.
<!-- basic --> <keep-alive> <component :is="view"></component> </keep-alive> <!-- multiple conditional children --> <keep-alive> <comp-a v-if="a > 1"></comp-a> <comp-b v-else></comp-b> </keep-alive> <!-- used together with `<transition>` --> <transition> <keep-alive> <component :is="view"></component> </keep-alive> </transition>
Note, <keep-alive>
is designed for the case where it has one direct child component that is being toggled. It does not work if you have v-for
inside it. When there are multiple conditional children, as above, <keep-alive>
requires that only one child is rendered at a time.
include
and exclude
New in 2.1.0+
The include
and exclude
props allow components to be conditionally cached. Both props can be a comma-delimited string, a RegExp or an Array:
<!-- comma-delimited string --> <keep-alive include="a,b"> <component :is="view"></component> </keep-alive> <!-- regex (use `v-bind`) --> <keep-alive :include="/a|b/"> <component :is="view"></component> </keep-alive> <!-- Array (use `v-bind`) --> <keep-alive :include="['a', 'b']"> <component :is="view"></component> </keep-alive>
The match is first checked on the component’s own name
option, then its local registration name (the key in the parent’s components
option) if the name
option is not available. Anonymous components cannot be matched against.
<keep-alive>
does not work with functional components because they do not have instances to be cached.
See also: Dynamic Components - keep-alive
Props:
name
- string, Used for named slot.Usage:
<slot>
serve as content distribution outlets in component templates. <slot>
itself will be replaced.
For detailed usage, see the guide section linked below.
See also: Content Distribution with Slots
© 2013–2017 Evan You, Vue.js contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://vuejs.org/v2/api/