This time I will bring you a detailed explanation of the use of vue components, and a detailed explanation of the precautions for the use of vue components. The following is a practical case, let's take a look.
Component (Component) is a simple encapsulation of data and methods. The component in the web can actually be regarded as a component of the page. It is an interface with independent logic and functions. At the same time, it can be integrated with each other according to the specified interface rules, and finally becomes a complete application. The page is composed of a It is composed of similar components, such as navigation, list, pop-up window, drop-down menu, etc. The page is just a container for such components. The components are freely combined to form a fully functional interface. When a component is not needed or you want to replace it, you can replace and delete it at any time without affecting the operation of the entire application. , The core idea of front-end componentization is to split a huge and complex thing into small things with reasonable granularity.
Use to improve development efficiency, facilitate reuse, simplify debugging steps, improve the maintainability of the entire project, and facilitate collaborative development.
As a lightweight front-end framework, vue’s core is component development.
Components can extend HTML elements and encapsulate 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 appear as native HTML elements extended with the is attribute.
In vue, components are reusable Vue instances. Because components are reusable Vue instances, they receive the same options as new Vue, such as data, computed, watch, methods, and lifecyclehooks. The only exceptions are root-instance-specific options like el.
Component registration
Global registration
Create components through Vue.component:
Vue.component('my-component-name', { // ... 选项 ... })
These Components are registered globally. That is to say, they can be used in the template of any newly created Vue root instance (new Vue) after registration. For example:
Vue.component('component-a', { /* ... */ }) Vue.component('component-b', { /* ... */ }) Vue.component('component-c', { /* ... */ }) new Vue({ el: '#app' }) <p id="app"> <component-a></component-a> <component-b></component-b> <component-c></component-c> </p>
The same is true in all sub-components, which means that these three components can also use each other internally.
Local registration
Global registration is often not ideal. For example, if you use a build system like webpack, registering all components globally means that even if you no longer use a component, it will still be included in your final build result. This results in an unnecessary increase in the amount of JavaScript downloaded by users.
In these cases, you can define the component via a plain JavaScript object:
var ComponentA = { /* ... */ } var ComponentB = { /* ... */ } var ComponentC = { /* ... */ }
Then define the component you want to use in the components options:
new Vue({ el: '#app' components: { 'component-a': ComponentA, 'component-b': ComponentB } })
For each attribute in the components object, its attribute name is the name of the custom element, and its attribute value is the option object of this component.
Note that locally registered components are not available in their child components. For example, if you want ComponentA to be available in ComponentB, you need to write like this:
var ComponentA = { /* ... */ } var ComponentB = { components: { 'component-a': ComponentA }, // ... }
Use registered components in Babel and webpack
import ComponentA from './ComponentA.vue' export default { components: { ComponentA }, // ... }
Note that in ES2015, Putting a variable name similar to ComponentA in the object is actually ComponentA: the abbreviation of ComponentA, that is, the variable name is also:
The name of the custom element used in the template
Contains the option of this component Variable name
Automated global registration of basic components
I don’t understand.
data must be a function
data: { count: 0 }
The variables in the data defined in this way are global variables. When using components, modifying the value of the variable in one component will affect the value in all components. The value of the variable. To avoid variable interference, a component's data option must be a function, so each instance can maintain an independent copy of the returned object:
data: function () { return { count: 0 } }
Dynamic components
It is very useful to dynamically switch between different components, such as in a multi-tab interface:
##The above content can be passed through Vue's<!-- 组件会在 `currentTabComponent` 改变时改变 --> <component v-bind:is="currentTabComponent"></component>
你会注意到,如果你选择了一篇文章,切换到 Archive 标签,然后再切换回 Posts,是不会继续展示你之前选择的文章的。这是因为你每次切换新标签的时候,Vue 都创建了一个新的 currentTabComponent 实例。
重新创建动态组件的行为通常是非常有用的,但是在这个案例中,我们更希望那些标签的组件实例能够被在它们第一次被创建的时候缓存下来。为了解决这个问题,我们可以用一个
<!-- 失活的组件将会被缓存!--> <keep-alive> <component v-bind:is="currentTabComponent"></component> </keep-alive>
可以在这里查看动态组件例子。https://jsfiddle.net/chrisvfritz/Lp20op9o/
dom标签内使用组件
有些 HTML 元素,诸如