This section uses single-file component syntax for code examples
This guide assumes that you have already read the Composition API Introduction and Reactivity Fundamentals. Read that first if you are new to Composition API.
When using the Composition API, the concept of reactive refs and template refs are unified. In order to obtain a reference to an in-template element or component instance, we can declare a ref as usual and return it from setup():
<template> <div ref="root">This is a root element</div> </template> <script> import { ref, onMounted } from 'vue' export default { setup() { const root = ref(null) onMounted(() => { // the DOM element will be assigned to the ref after initial render console.log(root.value) // <div>This is a root element</div> }) return { root } } } </script>
Here we are exposing root
on the render context and binding it to the div as its ref via ref="root"
. In the Virtual DOM patching algorithm, if a VNode's ref
key corresponds to a ref on the render context, the VNode's corresponding element or component instance will be assigned to the value of that ref. This is performed during the Virtual DOM mount / patch process, so template refs will only get assigned values after the initial render.
Refs used as templates refs behave just like any other refs: they are reactive and can be passed into (or returned from) composition functions.
export default { setup() { const root = ref(null) return () => h('div', { ref: root }) // with JSX return () => <div ref={root} /> } }
v-for
Composition API template refs do not have special handling when used inside v-for
. Instead, use function refs to perform custom handling:
<template> <div v-for="(item, i) in list" :ref="el => { if (el) divs[i] = el }"> {{ item }} </div> </template> <script> import { ref, reactive, onBeforeUpdate } from 'vue' export default { setup() { const list = reactive([1, 2, 3]) const divs = ref([]) // make sure to reset the refs before each update onBeforeUpdate(() => { divs.value = [] }) return { list, divs } } } </script>
Watching a template ref for changes can be an alternative to the use of lifecycle hooks that was demonstrated in the previous examples.
But a key difference to lifecycle hooks is that watch()
and watchEffect()
effects are run before the DOM is mounted or updated so the template ref hasn't been updated when the watcher runs the effect:
<template> <div ref="root">This is a root element</div> </template> <script> import { ref, watchEffect } from 'vue' export default { setup() { const root = ref(null) watchEffect(() => { // This effect runs before the DOM is updated, and consequently, // the template ref does not hold a reference to the element yet. console.log(root.value) // => null }) return { root } } } </script>
Therefore, watchers that use template refs should be defined with the flush: 'post'
option. This will run the effect after the DOM has been updated and ensure that the template ref stays in sync with the DOM and references the correct element.
<template> <div ref="root">This is a root element</div> </template> <script> import { ref, watchEffect } from 'vue' export default { setup() { const root = ref(null) watchEffect(() => { console.log(root.value) // => <div>This is a root element</div> }, { flush: 'post' }) return { root } } } </script>
© 2013–present Yuxi Evan You
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://v3.vuejs.org/guide/composition-api-template-refs.html