If you're using a CDN build then the functions of the global API are accessible via the global Vue
object. e.g.:
const { createApp, h, nextTick } = Vue
If you're using ES modules then they can be imported directly:
import { createApp, h, nextTick } from 'vue'
Global functions that handle reactivity, such as reactive
and ref
, are documented separately. See Reactivity API for those functions.
Returns an application instance which provides an application context. The entire component tree mounted by the application instance share the same context.
const app = createApp({})
You can chain other methods after createApp
, they can be found in Application API
The function receives a root component options object as a first parameter:
const app = createApp({ data() { return { ... } }, methods: {...}, computed: {...} ... })
With the second parameter, we can pass root props to the application:
const app = createApp( { props: ['username'] }, { username: 'Evan' } )
<div id="app"> <!-- Will display 'Evan' --> {{ username }} </div>
The root props are raw props, much like those passed to h
to create a VNode. In addition to component props, they can also include attributes and event listeners to be applied to the root component.
interface Data { [key: string]: unknown } export type CreateAppFunction<HostElement> = ( rootComponent: PublicAPIComponent, rootProps?: Data | null ) => App<HostElement>
Returns a "virtual node", usually abbreviated to VNode: a plain object which contains information describing to Vue what kind of node it should render on the page, including descriptions of any child nodes. It is intended for manually written render functions:
render() { return h('h1', {}, 'Some title') }
Accepts three arguments: type
, props
and children
Type: String | Object | Function
Details:
An HTML tag name, a component, an async component, or a functional component. Using function returning null would render a comment. This parameter is required
Type: Object
Details:
An object corresponding to the attributes, props and events we would use in a template. Optional
Type: String | Array | Object
Details:
Children VNodes, built using h()
, or using strings to get "text VNodes" or an object with slots. Optional
h('div', {}, [ 'Some text comes first.', h('h1', 'A headline'), h(MyComponent, { someProp: 'foobar' }) ])
Implementation-wise defineComponent
does nothing but return the object passed to it. However, in terms of typing, the returned value has a synthetic type of a constructor for manual render function, TSX and IDE tooling support.
An object with component options
import { defineComponent } from 'vue' const MyComponent = defineComponent({ data() { return { count: 1 } }, methods: { increment() { this.count++ } } })
Or a setup
function, function name will be used as component name
import { defineComponent, ref } from 'vue' const HelloWorld = defineComponent(function HelloWorld() { const count = ref(0) return { count } })
Creates an async component that will be loaded only when it's necessary.
For basic usage, defineAsyncComponent
can accept a factory function returning a Promise
. Promise's resolve
callback should be called when you have retrieved your component definition from the server. You can also call reject(reason)
to indicate the load has failed.
import { defineAsyncComponent } from 'vue' const AsyncComp = defineAsyncComponent(() => import('./components/AsyncComponent.vue') ) app.component('async-component', AsyncComp)
When using local registration, you can also directly provide a function that returns a Promise
:
import { createApp, defineAsyncComponent } from 'vue' createApp({ // ... components: { AsyncComponent: defineAsyncComponent(() => import('./components/AsyncComponent.vue') ) } })
For advanced usage, defineAsyncComponent
can accept an object of the following format:
import { defineAsyncComponent } from 'vue' const AsyncComp = defineAsyncComponent({ // The factory function loader: () => import('./Foo.vue'), // A component to use while the async component is loading loadingComponent: LoadingComponent, // A component to use if the load fails errorComponent: ErrorComponent, // Delay before showing the loading component. Default: 200ms. delay: 200, // The error component will be displayed if a timeout is // provided and exceeded. Default: Infinity. timeout: 3000, // Defining if component is suspensible. Default: true. suspensible: false, /** * * @param {*} error Error message object * @param {*} retry A function that indicating whether the async component should retry when the loader promise rejects * @param {*} fail End of failure * @param {*} attempts Maximum allowed retries number */ onError(error, retry, fail, attempts) { if (error.message.match(/fetch/) && attempts <= 3) { // retry on fetch errors, 3 max attempts retry() } else { // Note that retry/fail are like resolve/reject of a promise: // one of them must be called for the error handling to continue. fail() } }, })
See also: Dynamic and Async components
This method accepts the same argument as defineComponent
, but instead returns a native Custom Element (opens new window) that can be used within any framework, or with no frameworks at all.
Usage example:
<my-vue-element></my-vue-element>
import { defineCustomElement } from 'vue' const MyVueElement = defineCustomElement({ // normal Vue component options here props: {}, emits: {}, template: `...`, // defineCustomElement only: CSS to be injected into shadow root styles: [`/* inlined css */`] }) // Register the custom element. // After registration, all `<my-vue-element>` tags on the page will be upgraded. customElements.define('my-vue-element', MyVueElement) // You can also programmatically instantiate the element: // (can only be done after registration) document.body.appendChild( new MyVueElement({ // initial props (optional) }) )
For more details on building Web Components with Vue, especially with Single File Components, see Vue and Web Components.
resolveComponent
can only be used within render
or setup
functions.
Allows resolving a component
by its name, if it is available in the current application instance.
Returns a Component
or the argument name
when not found.
const app = createApp({}) app.component('MyComponent', { /* ... */ })
import { resolveComponent } from 'vue' render() { const MyComponent = resolveComponent('MyComponent') }
Accepts one argument: name
Type: String
Details:
The name of a loaded component.
resolveDynamicComponent
can only be used within render
or setup
functions.
Allows resolving a component
by the same mechanism that <component :is="">
employs.
Returns the resolved Component
or a newly created VNode
with the component name as the node tag. Will raise a warning if the Component
was not found.
import { resolveDynamicComponent } from 'vue' render () { const MyComponent = resolveDynamicComponent('MyComponent') }
Accepts one argument: component
Type: String | Object (component’s options object)
Details:
For more details, refer to the documentation on Dynamic Components.
resolveDirective
can only be used within render
or setup
functions.
Allows resolving a directive
by its name, if it is available in the current application instance.
Returns a Directive
or undefined
when not found.
const app = createApp({}) app.directive('highlight', {})
import { resolveDirective } from 'vue' render () { const highlightDirective = resolveDirective('highlight') }
Accepts one argument: name
Type: String
Details:
The name of a loaded directive.
withDirectives
can only be used within render
or setup
functions.
Allows applying directives to a VNode. Returns a VNode with the applied directives.
import { withDirectives, resolveDirective } from 'vue' const foo = resolveDirective('foo') const bar = resolveDirective('bar') return withDirectives(h('div'), [ [foo, this.x], [bar, this.y] ])
Accepts two arguments: vnode
and directives
.
Type: vnode
Details:
A virtual node, usually created with h()
.
Type: Array
Details:
An array of directives.
Each directive itself is an array, which allows for up to 4 indexes to be defined as seen in the following examples.
[directive]
- The directive by itself. Required.const MyDirective = resolveDirective('MyDirective') const nodeWithDirectives = withDirectives(h('div'), [[MyDirective]])
[directive, value]
- The above, plus a value of type any
to be assigned to the directiveconst MyDirective = resolveDirective('MyDirective') const nodeWithDirectives = withDirectives(h('div'), [[MyDirective, 100]])
[directive, value, arg]
- The above, plus a String
argument, ie. click
in v-on:click
const MyDirective = resolveDirective('MyDirective') const nodeWithDirectives = withDirectives(h('div'), [ [MyDirective, 100, 'click'] ])
[directive, value, arg, modifiers]
- The above, plus a key: value
pair Object
defining any modifiers.const MyDirective = resolveDirective('MyDirective') const nodeWithDirectives = withDirectives(h('div'), [ [MyDirective, 100, 'click', { prevent: true }] ])
The createRenderer function accepts two generic arguments: HostNode
and HostElement
, corresponding to Node and Element types in the host environment.
For example, for runtime-dom, HostNode would be the DOM Node
interface and HostElement would be the DOM Element
interface.
Custom renderers can pass in the platform specific types like this:
import { createRenderer } from 'vue' const { render, createApp } = createRenderer<Node, Element>({ patchProp, ...nodeOps })
Accepts two arguments: HostNode
and HostElement
Type: Node
Details:
The node in the host environment.
Type: Element
Details:
The element in the host environment.
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.
import { createApp, nextTick } from 'vue' const app = createApp({ setup() { const message = ref('Hello!') const changeMessage = async newMessage => { message.value = newMessage await nextTick() console.log('Now DOM is updated') } } })
See also: $nextTick
instance method
Takes multiple objects containing VNode props and merges them into a single object. A newly created object is returned, the objects passed as arguments are not modified.
Any number of objects can be passed, with properties from later arguments taking precedence. Event listeners are handled specially, as are class
and style
, with the values of these properties being merged rather than overwritten.
import { h, mergeProps } from 'vue' export default { inheritAttrs: false, render() { const props = mergeProps( { // The class will be merged with any class from $attrs class: 'active' }, this.$attrs ) return h('div', props) } }
useCssModule
can only be used within render
or setup
functions.
Allows CSS modules to be accessed within the setup
function of a single-file component:
<script> import { h, useCssModule } from 'vue' export default { setup() { const style = useCssModule() return () => h( 'div', { class: style.success }, 'Task complete!' ) } } </script> <style module> .success { color: #090; } </style>
For more information about using CSS modules, see SFC Style Features: <style module>
.
Accepts one argument: name
Type: String
Details:
The name of the CSS module. Defaults to '$style'
.
Provides the installed version of Vue as a string.
const version = Number(Vue.version.split('.')[0]) if (version === 3) { // Vue 3 } else if (version === 2) { // Vue 2 } else { // Unsupported versions of Vue }
See also: Application API - version
© 2013–present Yuxi Evan You
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://v3.vuejs.org/api/global-api.html