Load AJAX in Framework7, vue - vue.js

I'm very new to Framework7, and want to build a fairly simple mobile app -- a list of places, detail pages of those places (where some murals are displayed), and a map and about page. My current plan is to publish it via PhoneGap Build, since that seems like a fast and easy way to deploy.
I created my app using the phonegap-framework7-vue template. Perhaps overkill for such a simple app, but seems better than building it from scratch.
I want to load a list of places via AJAX (eventually via sqlite), and can't figure out how/when to do this, and how to access the main app. My Murals.vue file has the template and the following script, but doesn't load because app.request is undefined. I've tried "framework7", "Framework7", and moving it outside of the mounted() call, but feel like I'm just guessing. Any suggested? Thanks!
<script>
import F7List from "framework7-vue/src/components/list";
let dataURL = 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts'; // returns some json
export default {
name: 'Murals',
components: {F7List},
mounted() { // when the Vue app is booted up, this is run automatically.
app.request.get(dataURL, function (data) {
console.log(data);
});
},
data () {
return {
title: 'Murals'
};
}
};
</script>

You're code is almost right !
To access to F7 app instance with vue, you have to use this.$f7.request rather the app.request

Related

Initate Session on page load

I have a requirement where I need to set Global Axios header and refresh session(Calling multiple Api's). In vuejs we would have a App.vue which is the entry point for our application we would do these types of processing in that.
App.vue
export default {
async created(){
await this.$store.dispatch('initateSession');
}
}
The benefits of doing this is that this is called only once(not on every route change), and on every page load, I am looking to implement the same functionlity in Nuxt.
Now as we dont have any App.vue in case of Nuxt one solution that i could think off is to create a middleware for this , which can work but that will be called on every route change I dont want that, does anyone know any workaround for it?
Instead of middleware you can create a plugin:
plugins/session.js:
window.onNuxtReady(() => {
// Do something
})
And then add it to the plugins section inside nuxt.config.js.

Fetching global api data in nuxt

I'm starting Nuxt project and I have to fetch basic data from my backend.
for example language dictionary or some data for leftbar and etc.
in Vue I can just call everything I need in App.vue and save it in vuex and then use whenever I want, but with Nuxt every page is different and I'm curious where should i call this global data api calls.
I'm guessing I have to create middleware and call actions if data is not loaded already or there is better solution?
You mention it's global data and you're using universal mode- I think you're looking for nuxtServerInit(). This store action runs once on the server, before created, mounted hooks etc. You can use it to populate your store with data that your components (including pages) rely on.
Take a look at the docs.
actions: {
nuxtServerInit ({ commit }, { req }) {
if (req.session.user) {
commit('user', req.session.user)
}
}
}

How to acced to google object in vue 2?

I'm trying to use the google maps API at my vue2 project and I have tried some ways that have failed. After using the vue2googlemaps module and the node module from google I have decided to use the CDN directly and add it to the index page. My problem now is that to acced to the google object, for example, to create a Marker or something like that, I need to use this.marker = new window.google.maps.Marker() for example, but in the tutorials I have seen, everyone uses directly the google object and never uses that window. I can`t understand why it happens. It would be appreciated if someone shows me the correct way to import or use this library on google.
It's because your template's code is compiled and executed in your component instance (a.k.a vm) 's scope, not in the global (a.k.a. window) scope.
To use google directly in your template you could add the following computed:
computed: {
google: () => window.google
}
If your problem is not having google defined in the component's <script>, a simple solution is to add it as a const at the top:
import Vue from 'vue';
const google = window.google;
export default Vue.extend({
computed: {
google: () => google // also make it available in template, as `google`
}
})
An even more elegant solution is to teach webpack to get google from the window object whenever it's imported in any of your components:
vue.config.js:
module.exports = {
configureWebpack: {
externals: {
google: 'window.google'
}
}
}
This creates a google namespace in your webpack configuration so you can import from it in any of your components:
import google from 'google';
//...
computed: {
google: () => google // provide it to template, as `google`
}
Why do I say it's more elegant?
Because it decouples the component from the context and now you don't need to modify the component when used in different contexts (i.e: in a testing environment, which might not even use a browser, so it might not have a window object, but a global instead; all you'd have to do in this case is to define a google namespace in that environment and that's where your component will get its google object from; but you wouldn't have to tweak or mock any of the component's methods/properties).

Recommended way of waiting on an Apollo query before rendering the next page?

When using the Apollo module in a Nuxt app, the default behavior when changing routes is to render the new page immediately, before data has been fetched via Apollo.
This results in some pretty janky rendering experiences where the page does a partial render and very soon after completes rendering with data from the server, making everything on the page shift due to the changing size of components that now have data. This looks pretty bad because the data actually comes back fairly quickly, so it would be fine to wait for the data to return before rendering the new route.
What's the recommended way of waiting on the Apollo queries on a page (and its subcomponents) to complete before rendering the page?
(There's a related question that's not specific to Nuxt, but I'm not sure how to translate the recommendation to a Nuxt app.)
I'd love to see a code example of using beforeRouteEnter to fetch data via Apollo and only entering the route once the data is fetched.
Haven't used this module before, but it should be like any other async action you want to perform before page rendering in Nuxt.
It only depends if you want to pre-fill the store:
https://github.com/nuxt-community/apollo-module#nuxtserverinit
https://nuxtjs.org/guide/vuex-store/#the-nuxtserverinit-action
or only one page:
https://github.com/nuxt-community/apollo-module#asyncdatafetch-method-of-page-component
https://nuxtjs.org/guide/async-data
You can use async/await or promises if you have more than one request before page should be rendered.
When async actions are finished, Nuxt starts rendering the page. This works for SSR and if you navigate to pages on the client (nuxtServerInit will only fire once when real request is made, not when navigating on client side).
Side note: beforeRouteEnter is usually used, to validate params and check if the route is allowed.
did you try disabling the prefetch?
prefetch: false
The best approach is to use the loading attribute:
<template>
<div v-if="!this.$apollo.loading">
Your product: {{product}}
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "Product",
apollo: {
product: {
query: productQuery,
variables() {
return {
productId: this.productId
}
}
}
}
}
</script>
I'm unfamiliar with Apollo, but I think this is what you are looking for:
// Router.js
beforeRouteEnter(to, from, next)
{
executeSomeApolloPromise().then((data) => {
// The promise has now been complete; continue to the component.
next((vm) => {
// You have access here to the component instance via `vm`.
// Note that `beforeRouteEnter` is the only guard that has this.
vm.someApolloData = data;
});
});
}
See https://router.vuejs.org/guide/advanced/navigation-guards.html#per-route-guard

Vue-multiselect inconsistent reactive options

So I'm building an application using Laravel Spark, and therefore taking the opportunity to learn some Vue.js while I'm at it.
It's taken longer for me to get my head around it than I would have liked but I have nearly got Vue-multiselect working for a group of options, the selected options of which are retrieved via a get request and then updated.
The way in which I've got this far may well be far from the best, so bear with me, but it only seems to load the selected options ~60% of the time. To be clear - there are never any warnings/errors logged in the console, and if I check the network tab the requests to get the Tutor's instruments are always successfully returning the same result...
I've declared a global array ready:
var vm = new Vue({
data: {
tutorinstruments: []
}
});
My main component then makes the request and updates the variable:
getTutor() {
this.$http.get('/get/tutor')
.then(response => {
this.tutor = response.data;
this.updateTutor();
});
},
updateTutor() {
this.updateTutorProfileForm.profile = this.tutor.profile;
vm.tutorinstruments = this.tutor.instruments;
},
My custom multiselect from Vue-multiselect then fetches all available instruments and updates the available instruments, and those that are selected:
getInstruments() {
this.$http.get('/get/instruments')
.then(response => {
this.instruments = response.data;
this.updateInstruments();
});
},
updateInstruments() {
this.options = this.instruments;
this.selected = vm.tutorinstruments;
},
The available options are always there.
Here's a YouTube link to how it looks if you refresh the page over and over
I'm open to any suggestions and welcome some help please!
Your global array var vm = new Vue({...}) is a separate Vue instance, which lives outside your main Vue instance that handles the user interface.
This is the reason you are using both this and vm in your components. In your methods, this points to the Vue instance that handles the user interface, while vm points to your global array that you initialized outside the Vue instance.
Please check this guide page once more: https://v2.vuejs.org/v2/guide/instance.html
If you look at the lifecycle diagram that initializes all the Vue features, you will notice that it mentions Vue instance in a lot of places. These features (reactivity, data binding, etc.) are designed to operate within a Vue instance, and not across multiple instances. It may work once in a while when the timing is right, but not guaranteed to work.
To resolve this issue, you can redesign your app to have a single Vue instance to handle the user interface and also data.
Ideally I would expect your tutorinstruments to be loaded in a code that initializes your app (using mounted hook in the root component), and get stored in a Vuex state. Once you have the data in your Vuex state, it can be accessed by all the components.
Vuex ref: https://vuex.vuejs.org/en/intro.html
Hope it helps! I understand I haven't given you a direct solution to your question. Maybe we can wait for a more direct answer if you are not able to restructure your app into a single Vue instance.
What Mani wrote is 100% correct, the reason I'm going to chime in is because I just got done building a very large scale project with PHP and Vue and I feel like I'm in a good position to give you some advice / things I learned in the process of building out a PHP (server side) website but adding in Vue (client side) to the mix for the front end templating.
This may be a bit larger than the scope of your multiselect question, but I'll give you a solid start on that as well.
First you need to decide which one of them is going to be doing the routing (when users come to a page who is handling the traffic) in your web app because that will determine the way you want to go about using Vue. Let's say for the sake of discussion you decide to authenticate (if you have logins) with PHP but your going to handle the routing with Vue on the front end. In this instance your going to want to for sure have one main Vue instance and more or less set up something similar to this example from Vue Router pretending that the HTML file is your PHP index.php in the web root, this should end up being the only .php file you need as far as templating goes and I had it handle all of the header meta and footer copyright stuff, in the body you basically just want one div with the ID app.
Then you just use the vue router and the routes to load in your vue components (one for each page or category of page works easily) for all your pages. Bonus points if you look up and figure using a dynamic component in your main app.vue to lazy load in the page component based on the route so your bundle stays small.
*hint you also need a polyfill with babel to do this
template
<Component :is="dynamicComponent"/>
script
components: {
Account: () => import('./Account/Account.vue'),
FourOhFour: () => import('../FourOhFour.vue')
},
computed: {
dynamicComponent() {
return this.$route.name;
}
},
Now that we are here we can deal with your multiselect issue (this also basically will help you to understand an easy way to load any component for Vue you find online into your site). In one of your page components you load when someone visits a route lets say /tutor (also I went and passed my authentication information from PHP into my routes by localizing it then using props, meta fields, and router guards, its all in that documention so I'll leave that to you if you want to explore) on tutor.vue we will call that your page component is where you want to call in multiselect. Also at this point we are still connected to our main Vue instance so if you want to reference it or your router from tutor.vue you can just use the Vue API for almost anything subbing out Vue or vm for this. But the neat thing is in your main JS file / modules you add to it outside Vue you can still use the API to reference your main Vue instance with Vue after you have loaded the main instance and do whatever you want just like you were inside a component more or less.
This is the way I would handle adding in external components from this point, wrapping them in another component you control and making them a child of your page component. Here is a very simple example with multiselect pretend the parent is tutor.vue.
Also I have a global event bus running, thought you might like the idea
https://alligator.io/vuejs/global-event-bus/
tutor.vue
<template>
<div
id="user-profile"
class="account-content container m-top m-bottom"
>
<select-input
:saved-value="musicPreviouslySelected"
:options="musicTypeOptions"
:placeholder="'Choose an your music thing...'"
#selected="musicThingChanged($event)"
/>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import SelectInput from './SelectInput';
import EventBus from './lib/eventBus';
export default {
components: {
SelectInput
},
data() {
return {
profileLoading: true,
isFullPage: false,
isModalActive: false,
slackId: null,
isActive: false,
isAdmin: false,
rep: {
id: null,
status: '',
started: '',
email: '',
first_name: '',
},
musicTypeOptions: []
};
},
created() {
if (org.admin) {
this.isAdmin = true;
}
this.rep.id = parseInt(this.$route.params.id);
this.fetchData();
},
mounted() {
EventBus.$on('profile-changed', () => {
// Do something because something happened somewhere else client side.
});
},
methods: {
fetchData() {
// use axios or whatever to fetch some data from the server and PHP to
// load into the page component so say we are getting the musicTypeOptions
// which will be in our selectbox.
},
musicThingChanged(event) {
// We have our new selection "event" from multiselect so do something
}
}
};
</script>
this is our child Multiselect wrapper SelectInput.vue
<template>
<multiselect
v-model="value"
:options="options"
:placeholder="placeholder"
label="label"
track-by="value"
#input="inputChanged" />
</template>
<script>
import Multiselect from 'vue-multiselect';
export default {
components: { Multiselect },
props: {
options: {
type: [Array],
default() {
return [];
}
},
savedValue: {
type: [Array],
default() {
return [];
}
},
placeholder: {
type: [String],
default: 'Select Option...'
}
},
data() {
return {
value: null
};
},
mounted() {
this.value = this.savedValue;
},
methods: {
inputChanged(selected) {
this.$emit('selected', selected.value);
}
}
};
</script>
<style scoped>
#import '../../../../../node_modules/vue-multiselect/dist/vue-multiselect.min.css';
</style>
Now you can insure you are manging the lifecycle of your page and what data you have when, you can wait until you get musicTypeOptions before it will be passed to SelectInput component which will in turn set up Multiselect or any other component and then handle passing the data back via this.$emit('hihiwhatever') which gets picked up by #hihiwhatever on the component in the template which calls back to a function and now you are on your way to do whatever with the new selection and pass different data to SelectInput and MultiSelect will stay in sync always.
Now for my last advice, from experience. Resist the temptation because you read about it 650 times a day and it seems like the right thing to do and use Vuex in a setup like this. You have PHP and a database already, use it just like Vuex would be used if you were making is in Node.js, which you are not you have a perfectly awesome PHP server side storage, trying to manage data in Vuex on the front end, while also having data managed by PHP and database server side is going to end in disaster as soon as you start having multiple users logged in messing with the Vuex data, which came from PHP server side you will not be able to keep a single point of truth. If you don't have a server side DB yes Vuex it up, but save yourself a headache and wait to try it until you are using Node.js 100%.
If you want to manage some data client side longer than the lifecycle of a page view use something like https://github.com/gruns/ImmortalDB it has served me very well.
Sorry this turned into a blog post haha, but I hope it helps someone save themselves a few weeks.