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Module to scan and auto import components for Nuxt 2.13+
components/ directorySet the components option in nuxt.config:
export default {
components: true
}
Note: If using nuxt 2.10...2.13, you have to also manually install and add @nuxt/components to buildModules inside nuxt.config.
Create your components:
| components/
---| ComponentFoo.vue
---| ComponentBar.vue
Use them whenever you want, they will be auto imported in .vue files :
<template>
<ComponentFoo />
<component-bar />
</template>
No need anymore to manually import them in the script section!
See live demo or video example.
Nuxt by default does code-splitting per page and components. But sometimes we also need to lazy load them:
v-if or being in a modalIn order to lazy load a component, all we need to do is to add Lazy prefix to component name.
You now can easily import a component on-demand:
<template>
<LazyComponentFoo v-if="foo" />
<button @click="loadFoo">
Load Foo
</button>
</template>
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
foo: null
}
},
methods: {
async loadFoo() {
this.foo = await this.$axios.$get('foo')
}
}
}
</script>
If you want to prefetch or preload the components with Lazy prefix, you can configure it by prefetch/preload options.
If you have components in nested directories:
| components/
---| my/
------| form/
---------| TextArea.vue
The component name will contain its path:
<MyFormTextArea />
For clarity, it is recommended that component file name matches its name. You can also use MyFormTextArea.vue as name with same directory structure.
If for any reason different prefix is desired, we can add specific directory with the prefix option: (See directories section)
components: ['~/components/', { path: '~/components/foo/', prefix: 'foo' }]
It is possible to have a way to overwrite components using the level option. This is very useful for modules and theme authors.
Considering this structure:
| node_modules/
---| my-theme/
------| components/
---------| Header.vue
| components/
---| Header.vue
Then defining in the nuxt.config:
components: [
'~/components', // default level is 0
{ path: 'node_modules/my-theme/components', level: 1 }
]
Our components/Header.vue will overwrite our theme component since the lowest level overwrites.
By setting components: true, default ~/components directory will be included.
However you can customize module behaviour by providing directories to scan:
export default {
components: [
'~/components', // shortcut to { path: '~/components' }
{ path: '~/components/awesome/', prefix: 'awesome' }
]
}
Each item can be either string or object. String is shortcut to { path }.
Note: Don't worry about ordering or overlapping directories! Components module will take care of it. Each file will be only matched once with longest path.
StringPath (absolute or relative) to the directory containing your components.
You can use Nuxt aliases (~ or @) to refer to directories inside project or directly use a npm package path similar to require.
Array<string>builder.supportedExtensions)['vue', 'js'] or ['vue', 'js', 'ts', 'tsx'] depending on your environmentExample: Support multi-file component structure
If you prefer to split your SFCs into .js, .vue and .css, you can only enable .vue files to be scanned:
| components
---| componentC
------| componentC.vue
------| componentC.js
------| componentC.scss
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
components: [{ path: '~/components', extensions: ['vue'] }]
}
string (glob pattern)**/*.${extensions.join(',')}Accept Pattern that will be run against specified path.
Arraystring (glob pattern)[]Ignore patterns that will be run against specified path.
String'' (no prefix)Prefix all matched components.
Example below adds awesome-/Awesome prefix to the name of components in awesome/ directory.
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
components: [
'~/components',
{ path: '~/components/awesome/', prefix: 'awesome' }
]
}
components/
awesome/
Button.vue
Button.vue
<template>
<div>
<AwesomeButton>Click on me 🤘</AwesomeButton>
<button>Click on me</button>
</div>
</template>
BooleantruePrefix component name by it's path
BooleantrueWatch specified path for changes, including file additions and file deletions.
Boolean'auto'Transpile specified path using build.transpile, by default ('auto') it will set transpile: true if node_modules/ is in path.
Number0Level are use to define a hint when overwriting the components which have the same name in two different directories, this is useful for theming.
export default {
components: [
'~/components', // default level is 0
{ path: 'my-theme/components', level: 1 }
]
}
Components having the same name in ~/components will overwrite the one in my-theme/components, learn more in Overwriting Components. The lowest value will overwrite.
Boolean/NumberfalseThese properties are used in production to configure how components with Lazy prefix are handled by Wepack via its magic comments, learn more in Wepack's official documentation.
export default {
components: [{ path: 'my-theme/components', prefetch: true }]
}
yields:
// plugin.js
const componets = {
MyComponentA: import(/* webpackPrefetch: true */ ...),
MyComponentB: import(/* webpackPrefetch: true */ ...)
}
false unless component name ends with .async.vueThis flag indicates, component should be loaded async (with a seperate chunk) regardless of using Lazy prefix or not.
v1 to v2Starting with nuxt@2.15, Nuxt uses @nuxt/components v2:
components/global/
to components/ and global: true is not required anymorecomponents is used to prefix component names. If you were structing your
components in multiple directories, should either add prefix or register in components section of nuxt.config or use new pathPrefix option.Example:
components
├── atoms
│ └── icons
├── molecules
│ └── illustrations
├── organisms
│ └── ads
└── templates
├── blog
└── home
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
components: [
'~/components/templates',
'~/components/atoms',
'~/components/molecules',
'~/components/organisms'
]
}
Making Vue Component libraries with automatic tree-shaking and component registration is now damn easy ✨
This module expose a hook named components:dirs so you can easily extend the directory list without updating user configuration in your Nuxt module.
Imagine a directory structure like this:
| node_modules/
---| awesome-ui/
------| components/
---------| Alert.vue
---------| Button.vue
------| nuxt.js
| pages/
---| index.vue
| nuxt.config.js
Then in awesome-ui/nuxt.js you can use the components:dir hook:
import { join } from 'path'
export default function() {
this.nuxt.hook('components:dirs', dirs => {
// Add ./components dir to the list
dirs.push({
path: join(__dirname, 'components'),
prefix: 'awesome'
})
})
}
That's it! Now in your project, you can import your ui library as a Nuxt module in your nuxt.config.js:
export default {
buildModules: ['@nuxt/components', 'awesome-ui/nuxt']
}
And directly use the module components (prefixed with awesome-), our pages/index.vue:
<template>
<div>
My <AwesomeButton>UI button</AwesomeButton>!
<awesome-alert>Here's an alert!</awesome-alert>
</div>
</template>
It will automatically import the components only if used and also support HMR when updating your components in node_modules/awesome-ui/components/.
Next: publish your awesome-ui module to npm and share it with the other Nuxters ✨