Book Image

Vue.js 2.x by Example

By : Mike Street
Book Image

Vue.js 2.x by Example

By: Mike Street

Overview of this book

Vue.js is a frontend web framework which makes it easy to do just about anything, from displaying data up to creating full-blown web apps, and has become a leading tool for web developers. This book puts Vue.js into a real-world context, guiding you through example projects that helps you build Vue.js applications from scratch. With this book, you will learn how to use Vue.js by creating three Single Page web applications. Throughout this book, we will cover the usage of Vue, for building web interfaces, Vuex, an official Vue plugin which makes caching and storing data easier, and Vue-router, a plugin for creating routes and URLs for your application. Starting with a JSON dataset, the first part of the book covers Vue objects and how to utilize each one. This will be covered by exploring different ways of displaying data from a JSON dataset. We will then move on to manipulating the data with filters and search and creating dynamic values. Next, you will see how easy it is to integrate remote data into an application by learning how to use the Dropbox API to display your Dropbox contents in an application In the final section, you will see how to build a product catalog and dynamic shopping cart using the Vue-router, giving you the building blocks of an e-commerce store.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Product variations

With this particular dataset, each of our products contains at least one variation but can contain several. This normally goes hand-in-hand with the number of images but does not always correlate. Variations can be things such as color or size.

On our Product object, we have two keys which are going to help us display the variations. These are variationTypes, which list the names of the variations such as size and color, and variationProducts,which contains all of the variations. Each product within the variationProducts object has a further object of variant, which lists all of the changeable properties. For example, if a jacket came in two colors and each color had three sizes, there would be six variationProducts, each with two variant properties.

Every product will contain at least one variation, although if there is only one variation, we may need to consider...