In the tutorial of vue.js, we have this code
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
text: ''
}
},
methods: {
onInput(e) {
this.text = e.target.value
}
}
}
</script>
<template>
<input :value="text" #input="onInput" placeholder="Type here">
<p>{{ text }}</p>
</template>
And I don't understand why when I delete the bind on value, the two way binding is still working ?
In the tuto, it says that using the v-on & v-bind allow to do two way binding
Am I missing something ?
The Vue example is sort of a bad use case, a little simple for what it's trying to convey:
v-on is for assigning event listeners, so v-on:click="doSomething(value)"
v-bind is binding the actual value of vue data/state. So example:
<button v-on:click="setUserDetails(value)" v-bind:value="user.id">Click</button>
Imagine this component:
<template>
<input :value="value"/>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'MyComp',
props:{
value: String
}
}
</script>
And now a simple usage of it:
<template>
<MyComp v-model="passwd" type="password" minlength="3" #focus="onFocus"/>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'MyOtherComp',
data(){
return {
passwd: ''
}
},
methods:{
onFocus(){}
}
}
</script>
As you can see, value, type, and minlength properties and focus event are bidden to MyComp.
Now question: How can I handle extra props in MyComp? they are not defined in MyComp props. Vue gathers them in a special variable called $attrs, which is a normal JS object. Vue also gathers all events into $listeners variable.
Now inside MyComp these special variables are:
$atrrs:{
type: 'password',
minlength: '3'
}
$listerners:{
focus: /* function onFocus from parent */
}
To redirect these values:
<template>
<input :value="value" v-bind="$attrs" v-on="$listeners"/>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'MyComp',
props:{
value: String
}
}
</script>
As you can see, we use v-bind to bind extra props, and we use v-on to bind (redirect) events. The result is:
<input :value="value" :type="$attrs.type" :minlength="$attrs.minlength" #focus="$listeners.focus"/>
Of course you can use these directions to bind you objects too:
<template>
<input :value="value" v-bind="$attrs" v-bind="accumulated" v-on="$listeners"/>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'MyComp',
props:{
value: String
},
data(){
return {
accumulated:{
maxlenght: (+this.$attrs.minlength || 2) + 30, // It's just for a practice to use extra props inside JS code :-)
rows: 5,
}
}
}
}
</script>
Keep in mind that duplicate props will replace and the last one wins.
I have an object in my component data. Now, I'm just binding all the properties of the object as a prop to the child component using v-bind.sync directive. I'm updating these props from the child component using the built-in update event but still, I'm getting Avoid mutation props directly error in the console. Here is the minimal example attached.
Parent Component
<template>
<div>
<oslo v-bind.sync="data" />
</div>
</template>
<script>
import Oslo from '#/components/Oslo.vue'
export default {
components: {
Oslo,
},
name: 'OsloParent',
data() {
return {
data: {
data: {
name: 'Oslo name',
access: 'admin'
}
},
}
},
}
</script>
Child component
<template>
<div>
<input type="text" v-model="name" #keyup="$emit('update:name', name)" />
<input type="text" v-model="access" #keyup="$emit('update:access', access)" />
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: {
name: String,
access: String
},
name: 'Oslo',
}
</script>
This is just an example component I've created for the reproduction of the problem. The actual component is supposed to handle so many props with two-way binding and that's the reason I'm binding the data with v-bind directive with sync modifier. Here is the Vue warning from the console (most common).
[Vue warn]: Avoid mutating a prop directly since the value will be overwritten whenever the parent component re-renders. Instead, use a data or computed property based on the prop's value. Prop being mutated: "name"
Any suggestions to improve this or silent the Vue warn for this specific case? The above-given components works as desired, Vue throws error though.
I found two problems with your example that might throw this off.
The use of v-model directly to the property. Use v-bind instead to have it only display. And use v-on:change handler to fire the $emit('update:propertyname', value) and send the new value to update on the object.
The value sent along in the $emit seems empty and thus makes no change. Use $event.target.value instead.
Side note: v-on:keyup might not be the best event to listen to, since input can also be drag-and-dropped. Listening to v-on:change would be beter in that case.
Note on event listeners when using only v-bind.sync instead of v-bind:propertyName.sync:
If you want to listen to the update:propertyName event from the child component on the parent, you have to use the .capture modifier. Otherwise the update event is caught by the v-on:update:propertyName on the child component and this does not bubble up to the parent.
So you can use v-on:update:name.capture="someMethod" on the <oslo> tag for example. And have this someMethod in the parent's methods. After this is called, the event will be triggered on the child component which will update the object and thereby the property.
All together:
let Oslo = {
props: {
name: String,
access: String
},
name: 'Oslo',
template: `<div>
<input type="text" :value="name" #change="$emit('update:name', $event.target.value)" />
<input type="text" :value="access" #change="$emit('update:access', $event.target.value)" />
</div>`
}
new Vue({
el: "#app",
components: {
Oslo,
},
data: {
thedata: {
name: 'Oslo name',
access: 'admin'
}
},
methods: {
nameWillBeUpdated: function(v) {
console.log('New value of name will be:', v);
// After this, the `update:name` event handler of the
// child component is triggered and the value will change.
},
},
})
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/vue/2.5.17/vue.min.js"></script>
<div id="app">
<span>{{this.thedata.name}} - {{this.thedata.access}}</span>
<oslo
v-bind.sync="thedata"
v-on:update:name.capture="nameWillBeUpdated"
/>
</div>
You can just pass an object and sync it instead of individual properties if you have many properties to listen to from child component. See the example below:
Vue.config.productionTip = false
Vue.config.devtools = false
Vue.component('Oslo', {
template: `
<div>
<input type="text" v-model="comp_name" #keyup="$emit('update:name', comp_name)" />
<input type="text" v-model="comp_access" #keyup="$emit('update:access', comp_access)" />
</div>
`,
props: {
data: {
name: String,
access: String,
}
},
data() {
return {
comp_name: this.data.name,
comp_access: this.data.access
}
}
})
new Vue({
el: '#app',
data() {
return {
doc: {
name: 'Oslo name',
access: 'admin'
}
}
}
})
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/vue/2.5.17/vue.js"></script>
<div id="app">
<div>
<span>---- {{ this.doc.name }}----</span>
<span>---- {{ this.doc.access }}----</span>
<oslo :data="this.doc" v-bind.sync="doc" />
</div>
</div>
I am trying to create a few custom form fields for my page and i learned that i cannot use props to do so so i am trying to find a way to update my parent component variable when i use my child component. Whe i check the parent variable it is always empty.
Here is my component:
<template>
<input
v-model="value"
:placeholder="placeHolder"
class="form-field"
>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: ['placeHolder'],
data() {
return {
value: ''
}
},
methods: {
updateValue(){
this.$emit("update-text", this.value);
}
},
watch: {
value: function(){
this.updateValue
}
}
}
</script>
And this is how i use the component:
<TextField placeholder="Nome" :update-text="name = value"/>
what exactly am i doing wrong?
I am using vue.js with nuxt.js
I think a simpler approach in this case might be emitting an input event from your custom text field and binding the component to the variable using v-model.
TextField.vue
<template>
<input
#input="$emit('input', $event.target.value)"
:placeholder="placeHolder"
class="form-field"
>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: ['placeHolder']
}
</script>
Usage
<template>
<TextField placeholder="Nome" v-model="name"/>
</template>
<script>
export default {
data: () => ({
name: '',
}),
}
</script>
Read more about using v-model on custom components here.
I'm making a todo app in vue.js which has a component TodoItem
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':todo.completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{todo.task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todo"],
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.todo.completed = true
},
},
};
</script>
todo prop that I'm passing:
{
id:1,
task:'todo 1',
completed:false
}
but it is throwing an error error Unexpected mutation of "todo" prop
Method 1 (Vue 2.3.0+) - From your parent component, you can pass prop with sync modifier
Parent Component
<TodoItem v-for="todo in todoList" :key="todo.id" todo_prop.sync="todo">
Child Component
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':todo.completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{todo.task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todo_prop"],
data() {
return {
todo: this.todo_prop
}
},
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.todo.completed = true
},
},
};
</script>
Method 2 - Pass props from parent component without sync modifier and emit an event when the value changed. For this method, everything else is similar as well. Just need to emit an event when the todo item changed to completed.
The code is untested. Apologies if anything does not work.
What happen ? : Mutating a prop locally is now considered an anti-pattern, e.g. declaring a prop and then setting this.myProp = 'someOtherValue' in the component. Due to the new rendering mechanism, whenever the parent component re-renders, the child component’s local changes will be overwritten.
Solution : You can storage it as local data.
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todo"],
data() {
return {
todoLocal: this.todo,
};
},
methods: {
markComplete() {
this.todoLocal.completed = !this.todoLocal.completed;
},
},
};
For me to fix this problem I store props in todos data im watching brad vue tutorials and i get this error this is my actual codes and its working.
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{ 'is-complete': todo.completed }">
<p>
<input
type="checkbox"
v-on:change="markComplete(todo.completed)"
v-bind:checked="todo.completed"
/>
{{ todo.title }}
<!-- <button #click="$emit('del-todo', todo.id)" class="del">x</button> -->
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'TodoItem',
props: ['todo'],
data() {
return {
todos: this.todo,
}
},
methods: {
markComplete(isComplete) {
this.todos.completed = !isComplete
},
},
}
</script>
<style scoped>
.todo-item {
background: #f4f4f4;
padding: 10px;
border-bottom: 1px #ccc dotted;
}
.is-complete {
text-decoration: line-through;
}
.del {
background: #ff0000;
color: #fff;
border: none;
padding: 5px 9px;
border-radius: 50%;
cursor: pointer;
float: right;
}
</style>
One of the core principles of VueJS is that child components never mutate a prop.
All props form a one-way-down binding between the child property and the parent one: when the parent property updates, it will flow down to the child, but not the other way around.
If you wish to have the child component update todo.completed, you have two choices:
Use .sync modifier (Recommended)
This approach will require a bit of change to your props. You can read more about it here.
Parent component
<template>
<div>
...
<todo-item :task="nextTodo.task" :completed.sync="nextTodo.completed"/>
</div>
</template>
Child component
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["task", "completed"],
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.$emit('update:completed', true)
},
},
};
</script>
Use a custom event
Vue allows you set up listeners in your parent for events that the child will emit. Your child component can use this mechanism to ask the parent to change things. In fact, the above .sync modifier is doing exactly this behind the scenes.
Parent component
<template>
<div>
...
<todo-item :todo="nextTodo" #set-completed="$value => { nextTodo.completed = $value }/>
</div>
</template>
Child component
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':todo.completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{todo.task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todo"],
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.$emit('set-completed', true)
},
},
};
</script>
You can't change a prop from inside a component - they are meant to be set by the parent only. It's a one-directional communication path.
You can try one of two things - either move your logic for detecting a todo has been completed to the parent, or feed the prop into a new variable in the data() lifecycle hook (this will only happen when the component is loaded for the first time, so you won't be able to update from outside the component, if that's important for your use case).
The canonical way to achieve n-deep prop binding in Vue 3 is to wrap your prop with a simple computed property. This is an example of a component that will communicate changes to it's selected property to it's parent--who is ultimately responsible for storing the state.
<template>
<!-- In this example my-child-component also has a "selected" prop -->
<my-child-component v-model:selected="syncSelectedId" />
</template>
<script lang="ts">
export default defineComponent({
components: { MyChildComponent },
props: {
selected: {
type: String,
required: true,
}
},
emits: ['update:selected'],
setup(props, context) {
const syncSelectedId = computed<string>({
get() {
return props.selected;
},
set(newVal: string) {
context.emit('update:selected', newVal);
},
});
return {
syncSelectedId,
}
}
});
So to re-iterate: With this strategy the highest level parent is the holder of the state. The code above assumes that there is a parent component in the hierarchy (so this component is just a "middle-man").
Then my-child-component can simply emit its own update:selected event to cause the state to change. That child will be updated appropriately through it's prop after the emit event causes the parent chain to propagate that change up (through emits) and then back down the component hierarchy (through props).
If you wanted to you could modify the code above to make it the "owner" of the state:
<template>
<my-child-component v-model:selected="selected" />
</template>
<script lang="ts">
export default defineComponent({
components: { MyChildComponent },
setup(props, context) {
const selected = ref('');
return {
selected,
}
}
});
And now of course you won't run into the "Unexpected mutation of X prop" error.
Another option is to have a prop that serves as a "default value" for a given state:
<template>
<my-child-component v-model:selected="selected" />
</template>
<script lang="ts">
export default defineComponent({
components: { MyChildComponent },
props: {
defaultSelected: {
type: String,
required: false,
default: ''
}
},
setup(props, context) {
const selected = ref(props.defaultSelected);
return {
selected,
}
}
});
And in this code above keep in mind that selected will NOT change if defaultSelected changes after the component has been initialized.
And lastly it's worth noting that you could write more sophisticated code to detect if a property is supplied--and if not use an internal state variable to store the value. I use this pattern for re-usable components that could be embedded in places where the parent wants to control the state OR in places where the parent is happy to delegate the storage of the state to the child:
<template>
<!-- In this example my-child-component also has a "selected" prop -->
<my-child-component v-model:selected="syncSelectedId" />
</template>
<script lang="ts">
export default defineComponent({
components: { MyChildComponent },
props: {
selected: {
type: String,
required: false,
default: null // Important: parent MUST pass non-null value if it wants to control state
}
},
emits: ['update:selected'],
setup(props, context) {
// This is state storage used if prop.selected is not provided
const _selected = ref('');
const syncSelectedId = computed<string>({
get() {
return props.selected === null ? _selected.value : props.selected;
},
set(newVal: string) {
if (props.selected !== null) {
// Using prop.selected as the driving model...
if (newVal !== props.selected) {
// We need to set to empty string (never null)
context.emit('update:selectedId', (newVal == null ? '' : newVal));
}
} else { // Storing selection state with _selectedId
if (newVal !== _selected.value) {
_selected.value = newVal == null ? '' : newVal;
context.emit('update:selected', _selected);
}
}
},
});
return {
syncSelectedId,
}
}
});
This last example is tricky... it gives special meaning to null and requires that you be very mindful of potential values of your state. In my example empty string is my representation for "no selection" and null is used as a flag for "no parent model of this state".
Mainly, property mutation is now deprecated and parent properties are overwritten when the parent component renders its DOM.
Here's the official documentation about it. We can still achieve this in multiple possible ways. Through a data property, a computed property, and component events.
When we want to pass this value back to the parent component as well as the nested child component of the current child component, using a data property would be useful as shown in the following example.
Example:
Calling your child component from the parent component like this.
Parent component:
<template>
<TodoItem :todoParent="todo" />
</template>
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
todo: {
id:1,
task:'todo 1',
completed:false
}
};
}
}
</script>
Child component:
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':todo.completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{todo.task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todoParent"],
data() {
return {
todo: this.todoParent,
};
},
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.todo.completed = true
},
},
};
</script>
Even you can pass this property to the nested child component and it won't give this error/warning.
Other use cases when you only need this property sync between parent and child component. It can be achieved using the sync modifier from Vue. v-model can also be useful. Many other examples are available in this question thread.
Example2: using component events.
We can emit the event from the child component as below.
Parent component:
<template>
<TodoItem :todo="todo" #markCompletedParent="markCompleted" />
</template>
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
todo: {
id:1,
task:'todo 1',
completed:false
}
};
},
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.todo.completed = true
},
}
}
</script>
Child component:
<template>
<div class="todo-item" v-bind:class="{'is-completed':todo.completed}">
<p>
<input type="checkbox" #change="markCompleted" />
{{todo.task}}
<button class="del">x</button>
</p>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "TodoItem",
props: ["todo"],
methods: {
markCompleted() {
this.$emit('markCompletedParent', true)
},
}
};
</script>
While you can still custom-bind events to handle this, .sync property extensions are considered deprecated. In Vue3 (at least) you can and usually should use the v-model:property declaration, similar to how you bind the property to the actual input. You just need to bind the inner input with :value and have it emit a matching update:property
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script setup>
defineProps(['modelValue'])
defineEmits(['update:modelValue'])
</script>
<template>
<input
:value="modelValue"
#input="$emit('update:modelValue', $event.target.value)"
/>
</template>
And use thusly:
<CustomInput v-model="searchText" />
I have a component that takes a main <slot> from a form that is generated elsewhere in my application. I'm trying to use v-model on the form inputs but my vue component just spits out a warning about the properties not being defined, when in fact they are.
I admit it's a weird way of doing things, but it seems to be the easiest way for me to do this since my form is being generated by Symfony.
html:
<my-component>
<input ref="start" v-model="start"/>
</my-component>
my component:
<script>
export default {
data() {
start: null
},
mounted() {
console.log(this.$refs) // === {}; expected {"start":{...}}
}
}
</script>
<template>
<div>
<slot/>
... other stuff here
</div>
</template>
console log:
Property or method "start" is not defined on the instance but referenced during render
I cannot use $refs or v-model in the html. Am I doing something wrong? Or is this just not possible.
If you declare v-model="start" in the parent then it belongs to the parent and needs to be declared there. It looks like instead you declare it in the component instead as null.
If you reorder things it should work as you expect:
Parent:
<parent>
<input v-model="start" :start="start"/>
</parent>
<script>
export default {
data() {
start: null // Important to define start here if it's used in this component's html
}
}
</script>
Component:
<template>
<div>
<slot/>
... other stuff here
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: ['start'], // Receive the prop from the parent
data() {
},
mounted () {
console.log(this.start) // Should echo the value of the prop from the parent
}
}
</script>