Vue Function API
vue-function-api
provides a way to use function api from Vue3
in Vue2.x
.
Navigation
Installation
npm
npm install vue-function-api --save
yarn
yarn add vue-function-api
CDN
<script src="https://unpkg.com/vue-function-api/dist/vue-function-api.umd.js"></script>
By using the global variable window.vueFunctionApi
Usage
You must explicitly install vue-function-api
via Vue.use()
:
import Vue from 'vue'
import { plugin } from 'vue-function-api'
Vue.use(plugin)
After installing the plugin you can use the new function API to compose your component.
Example
Todo App Compare with Vue2 API
CodePen Live Demo
Single-File Component
<template>
<div>
<span>count is {{ count }}</span>
<span>plusOne is {{ plusOne }}</span>
<button @click="increment">count++</button>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import Vue from 'vue';
import { value, computed, watch, onMounted } from 'vue-function-api'
export default {
setup() {
// reactive state
const count = value(0);
// computed state
const plusOne = computed(() => count.value + 1);
// method
const increment = () => {
count.value++;
};
// watch
watch(
() => count.value * 2,
val => {
console.log(`count * 2 is ${val}`);
}
);
// lifecycle
onMounted(() => {
console.log(`mounted`);
});
// expose bindings on render context
return {
count,
plusOne,
increment,
};
},
};
</script>
TypeScript
To let TypeScript properly infer types inside Vue component options, you need to define components with Vue.component
、Vue.extend
or createComponent
:
import Vue from 'vue'
const Component = createComponent({
// type inference enabled
})
const Component = {
// this will NOT have type inference,
// because TypeScript can't tell this is options for a Vue component.
}
API
setup
▸ setup(props: Props
, context: Context
): Object|undefined
A new component option, setup()
is introduced. As the name suggests, this is the place where we use the function-based APIs to setup the logic of our component. setup()
is called when an instance of the component is created, after props resolution. The function receives the resolved props as its first argument.
The second argument provides a context
object which exposes a number of properties that were previously exposed on this in 2.x APIs.
const MyComponent = {
props: {
name: String
},
setup(props, context) {
console.log(props.name);
// context.attrs
// context.slots
// context.refs
// context.emit
// context.parent
// context.root
}
}
value
▸ value(value: any
): Wrapper
Calling value()
returns a value wrapper object that contains a single reactive property: .value
.
Example:
import { value } from 'vue-function-api'
const MyComponent = {
setup(props) {
const msg = value('hello')
const appendName = () => {
msg.value = `hello ${props.name}`
}
return {
msg,
appendName
}
},
template: `<div @click="appendName">{{ msg }}</div>`
}
state
▸ state(value: any
)
Equivalent with Vue.observable
.
Example:
import { state } from 'vue-function-api'
const object = state({
count: 0
})
object.count++
computed
▸ computed(getter: Function
, setter?: Function
): Wrapper
Equivalent with computed property from vue 2.x
.
Example:
import { value, computed } from 'vue-function-api'
const count = value(0)
const countPlusOne = computed(() => count.value + 1)
console.log(countPlusOne.value) // 1
count.value++
console.log(countPlusOne.value) // 2
watch
▸ watch(source: Wrapper | () => any
, callback: (newVal, oldVal)
, options?: WatchOption
): Function
▸ watch(source: Array<Wrapper | () => any>
, callback: ([newVal1, newVal2, ... newValN], [oldVal1, oldVal2, ... oldValN])
, options?: WatchOption
): Function
The watch
API provides a way to perform side effect based on reactive state changes.
Returns a Function
to stop the watch
.
effect-cleanup is NOT supported currently.
WatchOption
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
lazy | boolean |
false |
The opposite of 2.x's immediate option |
deep | boolean |
false |
Same as 2.x |
flush | "pre" | "post" | "sync" |
"post" |
"post" : fire after renderer flush; "pre" : fire before renderer flush; "sync" : fire synchronously |
Example:
watch(
// getter
() => count.value + 1,
// callback
(value, oldValue) => {
console.log('count + 1 is: ', value)
}
)
// -> count + 1 is: 1
count.value++
// -> count + 1 is: 2
Example (Multiple Sources):
watch(
[valueA, () => valueB.value],
([a, b], [prevA, prevB]) => {
console.log(`a is: ${a}`)
console.log(`b is: ${b}`)
}
)
lifecycle
▸ onCreated(cb: Function
)
▸ onBeforeMount(cb: Function
)
▸ onMounted(cb: Function
)
▸ onXXX(cb: Function
)
All current lifecycle hooks will have an equivalent onXXX
function that can be used inside setup()
Example:
import { onMounted, onUpdated, onUnmounted } from 'vue-function-api'
const MyComponent = {
setup() {
onMounted(() => {
console.log('mounted!')
})
onUpdated(() => {
console.log('updated!')
})
onUnmounted(() => {
console.log('unmounted!')
})
}
}
provide, inject
▸ provide(key: string
| symbol
, value: any
)
▸ inject(key: string
| symbol
)
Equivalent with provide
and inject
from 2.x
Example:
import { provide, inject } from 'vue-function-api'
const CountSymbol = Symbol()
const Ancestor = {
setup() {
// providing a value can make it reactive
const count = value(0)
provide(CountSymbol, count)
}
}
const Descendent = {
setup() {
const count = inject(CountSymbol)
return {
count
}
}
}
Context
The context
object exposes a number of properties that were previously exposed on this in 2.x APIs:
const MyComponent = {
setup(props, context) {
context.attrs
context.slots
context.refs
context.emit
context.parent
context.root
}
}
Full properties list:
- parent
- root
- refs
- slots
- attrs
- emit
Misc
- Due to the limitation of
Vue2.x
's public API,vue-function-api
inevitably introduces some extra workload. This shouldn't concern you unless you are already pushing your environment to the extreme.