Book Image

Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 - Second Edition

By : Maya Shavin, Raymond Camden, Clifford Gurney, Hugo Di Francesco
5 (2)
Book Image

Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 - Second Edition

5 (2)
By: Maya Shavin, Raymond Camden, Clifford Gurney, Hugo Di Francesco

Overview of this book

Are you looking to use Vue.js 3 for building web apps but don't know where to begin? Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 will help you get to grips with the core concepts of this JavaScript framework using practical examples that simulate real-world web projects. With this updated edition, you’ll experience all aspects of the new and improved Vue.js 3 as you work on mini projects such as a chat interface, a shopping cart, a price calculator, a to-do app, and a profile card generator for storing contact details. These realistic projects are presented as bite-size exercises that you can enjoy even as you challenge yourself. Throughout the book, you'll discover how to manage data in Vue components, define communication interfaces between components, and handle static and dynamic routing to control application flow. You'll also work with Vite and Vue DevTools and learn how to handle transition and animation effects for an engaging user experience. Finally, you’ll see how to test your app and deploy it to the web. By the end of this Vue.js book, you'll have the skills that enable you to work like an experienced Vue developer to build professional apps that can be used by others and have the confidence to tackle real-world frontend web development problems.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction and Crash Course
5
Part 2: Building Your First Vue App
11
Part 3: Global State Management
14
Part 4: Testing and Application Deployment

Summary

Throughout this chapter, we’ve looked at different approaches to testing different types of Vue.js applications.

Testing in general is useful for empirically showing that the system is working. Unit tests are the cheapest to build and maintain and should be the base of testing functionality. System tests are the next level up in the testing pyramid and allow you to gain confidence that the majority of features are working as expected. End-to-end tests show that the main flows of the full system work.

We’ve seen how to unit test components and methods, as well as testing through layers, and testing component output in a black-box fashion instead of inspecting component internals to test functionality. Using the Vitest testing library, we tested advanced functionality, such as routing and applications, that leverage Pinia.

Finally, we looked at snapshot testing and saw how it can be an effective way to write tests for template-heavy chunks of code.

In...