Because I am very interested in Vue.js, and the technology stack I usually work on is also Vue.js, I spent some time studying the Vue.js source code in the past few months, and made a summary and output. Components are one of the most powerful features of Vue.js. Components can extend HTML elements, encapsulating reusable code. This article will share with you several postures for Vue.js component communication. Friends who are interested should take a look.
Written in front
There may be deviations in understanding. Welcome to raise issues and point out, learn together and make progress together.
What is a Vue component?
Component is one of the most powerful features of Vue.js. Components can extend HTML elements, encapsulating reusable code. At a high level, a component is a custom element to which Vue.js's compiler adds special functionality. In some cases, components can also take the form of native HTML elements, extended with the is attribute.
Communication between Vue components
Communication from parent component to child component
Method 1: props
Using props, the parent component can use props to pass to the child component data.
Parent component vue template father.vue
<template> <child :msg="message"></child> </template> <script> import child from './child.vue'; export default { components: { child }, data () { return { message: 'father message'; } } } </script>
Child component vue template child.vue
<template> <p>{{msg}}</p> </template> <script> export default { props: { msg: { type: String, required: true } } } </script>
Method 2 uses $children
Use $children You can Access child components from parent components.
The child component communicates with the parent component
Method 1: Using vue events
The parent component passes the event method to the child component, and the child component triggers the event through $emit and calls back to the parent components.
Parent component vue template father.vue
<template> <child @msgFunc="func"></child> </template> <script> import child from './child.vue'; export default { components: { child }, methods: { func (msg) { console.log(msg); } } } </script>
Child component vue template child.vue
<template> <button @click="handleClick">点我</button> </template> <script> export default { props: { msg: { type: String, required: true } }, methods () { handleClick () { //........ this.$emit('msgFunc'); } } } </script>
Method 2: Modify the parent component data by modifying the props passed by the parent component
This method can only be used when the parent component passes a reference variable. Literal variables cannot achieve the corresponding effect. Because the drinking variable ultimately points to the same memory address, whether it is the data in the parent component or the data in the props obtained by the child component, so modifying the data in the props in the child component modifies the data in the parent component.
But this is not recommended. It is not recommended to directly modify the value of props. If the data is used to display modifications, in actual development I often put it into data and pass it back when needed. The parent component then uses events to return data. This keeps the components independent and decoupled, and does not cause abnormal data flow confusion due to the use of the same data. Data is only transmitted through specific interfaces to modify the data, and the internal data status is managed by specialized data.
Method 3: Use $parent
Use $parent to access the data of the parent component.
Data transfer between non-parent-child components and sibling components
For non-parent-child component communication, Vue officially recommends using a Vue instance as the central event bus.
Vue has an internal event mechanism, you can refer to the source code.
$on method is used to listen to an event.
$emit is used to trigger an event.
/*新建一个Vue实例作为中央事件总嫌*/ let event = new Vue(); /*监听事件*/ event.$on('eventName', (val) => { //......do something }); /*触发事件*/ event.$emit('eventName', 'this is a message.');
Multi-level parent-child component communication:
In Vue1.0, two methods, $broadcast and $dispatch, are implemented to broadcast (or dispatch) to child components (or parent components). When the child component (or parent component) listens to the event and returns true, the event will continue to be broadcast (or dispatched) to the grandchild-level component. But this method has been removed in Vue2.0.
When I was learning about element, the open source component library of Ele.me, I found that they re-implemented the broadcast and dispatch methods and introduced them in the form of mixin. For details, please refer to "Talk about element component library broadcast and dispatch". But it is slightly different from the two method implementations of Vue1.0. These two methods implement the functions of event broadcasting to descendant components and event dispatching to multi-level parent components. But it is not an event broadcast in a broad sense. It needs to specify a commentName to broadcast (dispatch) events to the component with the specified component name.
In fact, the internal implementation of these two methods still uses $parent and $children, which are used to traverse child nodes or query parent nodes step by step. When the specified component name is accessed, $emit is called to trigger Specify event.
Complex single-page application data management
When the application is complex enough, please use vuex for data management.
Related recommendations:
Vue sibling component communication method
Detailed explanation of event bus non-parent-child component communication in vue
Deep dive into Vue.js components and component communication
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