In-template expressions are very convenient, but they are meant for simple operations. Putting too much logic in your templates can make them bloated and hard to maintain. For example:
<div id="example"> {{ message.split('').reverse().join('') }} </div>
At this point, the template is no longer simple and declarative. You have to look at it for a second before realizing that it displays message
in reverse. The problem is made worse when you want to include the reversed message in your template more than once.
That’s why for any complex logic, you should use a computed property.
<div id="example"> <p>Original message: "{{ message }}"</p> <p>Computed reversed message: "{{ reversedMessage }}"</p> </div>
var vm = new Vue({ el: '#example', data: { message: 'Hello' }, computed: { // a computed getter reversedMessage: function () { // `this` points to the vm instance return this.message.split('').reverse().join('') } } })
Result:
Here we have declared a computed property reversedMessage
. The function we provided will be used as the getter function for the property vm.reversedMessage
:
console.log(vm.reversedMessage) // => 'olleH' vm.message = 'Goodbye' console.log(vm.reversedMessage) // => 'eybdooG'
You can open the console and play with the example vm yourself. The value of vm.reversedMessage
is always dependent on the value of vm.message
.
You can data-bind to computed properties in templates just like a normal property. Vue is aware that vm.reversedMessage
depends on vm.message
, so it will update any bindings that depend on vm.reversedMessage
when vm.message
changes. And the best part is that we’ve created this dependency relationship declaratively: the computed getter function has no side effects, which makes it easier to test and understand.
You may have noticed we can achieve the same result by invoking a method in the expression:
<p>Reversed message: "{{ reverseMessage() }}"</p>
// in component methods: { reverseMessage: function () { return this.message.split('').reverse().join('') } }
Instead of a computed property, we can define the same function as a method instead. For the end result, the two approaches are indeed exactly the same. However, the difference is that computed properties are cached based on their dependencies. A computed property will only re-evaluate when some of its dependencies have changed. This means as long as message
has not changed, multiple access to the reversedMessage
computed property will immediately return the previously computed result without having to run the function again.
This also means the following computed property will never update, because Date.now()
is not a reactive dependency:
computed: { now: function () { return Date.now() } }
In comparison, a method invocation will always run the function whenever a re-render happens.
Why do we need caching? Imagine we have an expensive computed property A, which requires looping through a huge Array and doing a lot of computations. Then we may have other computed properties that in turn depend on A. Without caching, we would be executing A’s getter many more times than necessary! In cases where you do not want caching, use a method instead.
Vue does provide a more generic way to observe and react to data changes on a Vue instance: watch properties. When you have some data that needs to change based on some other data, it is tempting to overuse watch
- especially if you are coming from an AngularJS background. However, it is often a better idea to use a computed property rather than an imperative watch
callback. Consider this example:
<div id="demo">{{ fullName }}</div>
var vm = new Vue({ el: '#demo', data: { firstName: 'Foo', lastName: 'Bar', fullName: 'Foo Bar' }, watch: { firstName: function (val) { this.fullName = val + ' ' + this.lastName }, lastName: function (val) { this.fullName = this.firstName + ' ' + val } } })
The above code is imperative and repetitive. Compare it with a computed property version:
var vm = new Vue({ el: '#demo', data: { firstName: 'Foo', lastName: 'Bar' }, computed: { fullName: function () { return this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName } } })
Much better, isn’t it?
Computed properties are by default getter-only, but you can also provide a setter when you need it:
// ... computed: { fullName: { // getter get: function () { return this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName }, // setter set: function (newValue) { var names = newValue.split(' ') this.firstName = names[0] this.lastName = names[names.length - 1] } } } // ...
Now when you run vm.fullName = 'John Doe'
, the setter will be invoked and vm.firstName
and vm.lastName
will be updated accordingly.
While computed properties are more appropriate in most cases, there are times when a custom watcher is necessary. That’s why Vue provides a more generic way to react to data changes through the watch
option. This is most useful when you want to perform asynchronous or expensive operations in response to changing data.
For example:
<div id="watch-example"> <p> Ask a yes/no question: <input v-model="question"> </p> <p>{{ answer }}</p> </div>
<!-- Since there is already a rich ecosystem of ajax libraries --> <!-- and collections of general-purpose utility methods, Vue core --> <!-- is able to remain small by not reinventing them. This also --> <!-- gives you the freedom to use what you're familiar with. --> <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/axios.min.js"></script> <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/lodash.min.js"></script> <script> var watchExampleVM = new Vue({ el: '#watch-example', data: { question: '', answer: 'I cannot give you an answer until you ask a question!' }, watch: { // whenever question changes, this function will run question: function (newQuestion) { this.answer = 'Waiting for you to stop typing...' this.getAnswer() } }, methods: { // _.debounce is a function provided by lodash to limit how // often a particularly expensive operation can be run. // In this case, we want to limit how often we access // yesno.wtf/api, waiting until the user has completely // finished typing before making the ajax request. To learn // more about the _.debounce function (and its cousin // _.throttle), visit: https://lodash.com/docs#debounce getAnswer: _.debounce( function () { if (this.question.indexOf('?') === -1) { this.answer = 'Questions usually contain a question mark. ;-)' return } this.answer = 'Thinking...' var vm = this axios.get('https://yesno.wtf/api') .then(function (response) { vm.answer = _.capitalize(response.data.answer) }) .catch(function (error) { vm.answer = 'Error! Could not reach the API. ' + error }) }, // This is the number of milliseconds we wait for the // user to stop typing. 500 ) } }) </script>
Result:
In this case, using the watch
option allows us to perform an asynchronous operation (accessing an API), limit how often we perform that operation, and set intermediary states until we get a final answer. None of that would be possible with a computed property.
In addition to the watch
option, you can also use the imperative vm.$watch API.
© 2013–2017 Evan You, Vue.js contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://vuejs.org/v2/guide/computed.html