Book Image

Vue.js: Understanding its Tools and Ecosystem

By : Dave Berning
Book Image

Vue.js: Understanding its Tools and Ecosystem

By: Dave Berning

Overview of this book

Vue.js is one of the top three “go-to” JavaScript frameworks and is used by organizations such as Nintendo, NASA, and Expedia. This book is primarily focused on the ecosystem of Vue.js and its development tools. Understanding the basics of the technology behind the Vue.js ecosystem will improve your skills and make you a better problem solver. The book begins with a brief overview of Vue.js. You’ll learn to work your way through the Vue command line interface CLI 3, and use the Vue Router library to navigate between the different views of your application. As you advance through the topics, you’ll explore the use of DevTools to improve the quality of your applications and how to implement server-side rendering in your application through the Nuxt.js framework. Toward the end of the book, you’ll read about the future of Vue.js and its growing popularity. After reading this book, you’ll be able to create industry-grade applications using Vue.js and its tools.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Adding Plugins

In Nuxt, you can define third-party scripts or your own scripts and functionality that you want to be executed globally throughout your application. Since you do not have access to the main.js file in Nuxt like you would in a traditional Vue.js application, you can instead add plugins. These plugins will be initialized before the page is fully rendered and sent to the client. You create a plugin by simply adding a JavaScript file into the plugins directory. For example, let’s say you want to use Font Awesome, the popular icon font library. We certainly do not want to add the Font Awesome library within each component that needs it. That’s not very efficient or DRY. So let’s fix that with plugins.

Let’s start by creating a new file in the plugins directory called, font-awesome.js. Inside of that page, we need to import a few NPM libraries via ES6’s module syntax. Since plugins do not have access to the main Vue.js library, you need to...