Update the element's text content.
Expects: string
Details
v-text
works by setting the element's textContent property, so it will overwrite any existing content inside the element. If you need to update the part of textContent
, you should use mustache interpolations instead.
Example
<span v-text="msg"></span> <!-- same as --> <span>{{msg}}</span>
See also Template Syntax - Text Interpolation
Update the element's innerHTML.
Expects: string
Details
Contents of v-html
are inserted as plain HTML - Vue template syntax will not be processed. 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 Template Syntax - Raw HTML
Toggle the element's visibility based on the truthy-ness of the expression value.
Expects: any
Details
v-show
works by setting the display
CSS property via inline styles, and will try to respect the initial display
value when the element is visible. It also triggers transitions when its condition changes.
See also Conditional Rendering - v-show
Conditionally render an element or a template fragment based on the truthy-ness of the expression value.
Expects: any
Details
When a v-if
element is toggled, the element and its contained directives / components are destroyed and re-constructed. If the initial condition is falsy, then the inner content won't be rendered at all.
Can be used on <template>
to denote a conditional block containing only text or multiple elements.
This directive triggers transitions when its condition changes.
When used together, v-if
has a higher priority than v-for
. We don't recommend using these two directives together on one element — see the list rendering guide for details.
See also Conditional Rendering - v-if
Denote the "else block" for v-if
or a v-if
/ v-else-if
chain.
Does not expect expression
Details
Restriction: previous sibling element must have v-if
or v-else-if
.
Can be used on <template>
to denote a conditional block containing only text or multiple elements.
Example
<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
Denote the "else if block" for v-if
. Can be chained.
Expects: any
Details
Restriction: previous sibling element must have v-if
or v-else-if
.
Can be used on <template>
to denote a conditional block containing only text or multiple elements.
Example
<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
Render the element or template block multiple times based on the source data.
Expects: Array | Object | number | string | Iterable
Details
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="(value, key) in object"></div> <div v-for="(value, name, 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 should provide an ordering hint with the key
special attribute:
<div v-for="item in items" :key="item.id"> {{ item.text }} </div>
v-for
can also work on values that implement the Iterable Protocol, including native Map
and Set
.
See also
Attach an event listener to the element.
Shorthand: @
Expects: Function | Inline Statement | Object (without argument)
Argument: event
(optional if using Object syntax)
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..{keyAlias}
- only trigger handler on certain keys..once
- trigger handler at most once..left
- only trigger handler for left button mouse events..right
- only trigger handler for right button mouse events..middle
- only trigger handler for middle button mouse events..passive
- attaches a DOM event with { passive: true }
.Details
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.
When used on a normal element, it listens to native DOM events only. When used on a custom element component, it 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)"
.
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.
Example
<!-- method handler --> <button v-on:click="doThis"></button> <!-- dynamic event --> <button v-on:[event]="doThis"></button> <!-- inline statement --> <button v-on:click="doThat('hello', $event)"></button> <!-- shorthand --> <button @click="doThis"></button> <!-- shorthand dynamic event --> <button @[event]="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" /> <!-- the click event will be triggered at most once --> <button v-on:click.once="doThis"></button> <!-- object syntax --> <button v-on="{ mousedown: doThis, mouseup: doThat }"></button>
Listening to custom events on a child component (the handler is called when "my-event" is emitted on the child):
<MyComponent @my-event="handleThis" /> <!-- inline statement --> <MyComponent @my-event="handleThis(123, $event)" />
See also
Dynamically bind one or more attributes, or a component prop to an expression.
Shorthand:
:
or .
(when using .prop
modifier)Expects: any (with argument) | Object (without argument)
Argument: attrOrProp (optional)
Modifiers
.camel
- transform the kebab-case attribute name into camelCase..prop
- force a binding to be set as a DOM property. 3.2+
.attr
- force a binding to be set as a DOM attribute. 3.2+
Usage
When used to bind the class
or style
attribute, v-bind
supports additional value types such as Array or Objects. See linked guide section below for more details.
When setting a binding on an element, Vue by default checks whether the element has the key defined as a property using an in
operator check. If the property is defined, Vue will set the value as a DOM property instead of an attribute. This should work in most cases, but you can override this behavior by explicitly using .prop
or .attr
modifiers. This is sometimes necessary, especially when working with custom elements.
When used for component 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.
Example
<!-- bind an attribute --> <img v-bind:src="imageSrc" /> <!-- dynamic attribute name --> <button v-bind:[key]="value"></button> <!-- shorthand --> <img :src="imageSrc" /> <!-- same-name shorthand (3.4+), expands to :src="src" --> <img :src /> <!-- shorthand dynamic attribute name --> <button :[key]="value"></button> <!-- 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 }]"></div> <!-- 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> <!-- prop binding. "prop" must be declared in the child component. --> <MyComponent :prop="someThing" /> <!-- pass down parent props in common with a child component --> <MyComponent v-bind="$props" /> <!-- XLink --> <svg><a :xlink:special="foo"></a></svg>
The .prop
modifier also has a dedicated shorthand, .
:
<div :someProperty.prop="someObject"></div> <!-- equivalent to --> <div .someProperty="someObject"></div>
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 pre-compiling the template with a build step.
See also
Create a two-way binding on a form input element or a component.
Expects: varies based on value of form inputs element or output of components
Limited to:
<input>
<select>
<textarea>
Modifiers
See also
Denote named slots or scoped slots that expect to receive props.
Shorthand: #
Expects: JavaScript expression that is valid in a function argument position, including support for destructuring. Optional - only needed if expecting props to be passed to the slot.
Argument: slot name (optional, defaults to default
)
Limited to:
<template>
Example
<!-- Named slots --> <BaseLayout> <template v-slot:header> Header content </template> <template v-slot:default> Default slot content </template> <template v-slot:footer> Footer content </template> </BaseLayout> <!-- Named slot that receives props --> <InfiniteScroll> <template v-slot:item="slotProps"> <div class="item"> {{ slotProps.item.text }} </div> </template> </InfiniteScroll> <!-- Default slot that receive props, with destructuring --> <Mouse v-slot="{ x, y }"> Mouse position: {{ x }}, {{ y }} </Mouse>
See also
Skip compilation for this element and all its children.
Does not expect expression
Details
Inside the element with v-pre
, all Vue template syntax will be preserved and rendered as-is. The most common use case of this is displaying raw mustache tags.
Example
<span v-pre>{{ this will not be compiled }}</span>
Render the element and component once only, and skip future updates.
Does not expect expression
Details
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 --> <MyComponent v-once :comment="msg"></MyComponent> <!-- `v-for` directive --> <ul> <li v-for="i in list" v-once>{{i}}</li> </ul>
Since 3.2, you can also memoize part of the template with invalidation conditions using v-memo
.
See also
Expects: any[]
Details
Memoize a sub-tree of the template. Can be used on both elements and components. The directive expects a fixed-length array of dependency values to compare for the memoization. If every value in the array was the same as last render, then updates for the entire sub-tree will be skipped. For example:
<div v-memo="[valueA, valueB]"> ... </div>
When the component re-renders, if both valueA
and valueB
remain the same, all updates for this <div>
and its children will be skipped. In fact, even the Virtual DOM VNode creation will also be skipped since the memoized copy of the sub-tree can be reused.
It is important to specify the memoization array correctly, otherwise we may skip updates that should indeed be applied. v-memo
with an empty dependency array (v-memo="[]"
) would be functionally equivalent to v-once
.
Usage with v-for
v-memo
is provided solely for micro optimizations in performance-critical scenarios and should be rarely needed. The most common case where this may prove helpful is when rendering large v-for
lists (where length > 1000
):
<div v-for="item in list" :key="item.id" v-memo="[item.id === selected]"> <p>ID: {{ item.id }} - selected: {{ item.id === selected }}</p> <p>...more child nodes</p> </div>
When the component's selected
state changes, a large amount of VNodes will be created even though most of the items remained exactly the same. The v-memo
usage here is essentially saying "only update this item if it went from non-selected to selected, or the other way around". This allows every unaffected item to reuse its previous VNode and skip diffing entirely. Note we don't need to include item.id
in the memo dependency array here since Vue automatically infers it from the item's :key
.
When using v-memo
with v-for
, make sure they are used on the same element. v-memo
does not work inside v-for
.
v-memo
can also be used on components to manually prevent unwanted updates in certain edge cases where the child component update check has been de-optimized. But again, it is the developer's responsibility to specify correct dependency arrays to avoid skipping necessary updates.
See also
Used to hide un-compiled template until it is ready.
Does not expect expression
Details
This directive is only needed in no-build-step setups.
When using in-DOM templates, there can be a "flash of un-compiled templates": the user may see raw mustache tags until the mounted component replaces them with rendered content.
v-cloak
will remain on the element until the associated component instance is mounted. Combined with CSS rules such as [v-cloak] { display: none }
, it can be used to hide the raw templates until the component is ready.
Example
[v-cloak] { display: none; }
<div v-cloak> {{ message }} </div>
The <div>
will not be visible until the compilation is done.
© 2013–present Yuxi Evan You
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://vuejs.org/api/built-in-directives