Book Image

Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5

By : Anthony Gore
Book Image

Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5

By: Anthony Gore

Overview of this book

Vue is a JavaScript framework that can be used for anything from simple data display to sophisticated front-end applications and Laravel is a PHP framework used for developing fast and secure web-sites. This book gives you practical knowledge of building modern full-stack web apps from scratch using Vue with a Laravel back end. In this book, you will build a room-booking website named "Vuebnb". This project will show you the core features of Vue, Laravel and other state-of-the-art web development tools and techniques. The book begins with a thorough introduction to Vue.js and its core concepts like data binding, directives and computed properties, with each concept being explained first, then put into practice in the case-study project. You will then use Laravel to set up a web service and integrate the front end into a full-stack app. You will be shown a best-practice development workflow using tools like Webpack and Laravel Mix. With the basics covered, you will learn how sophisticated UI features can be added using ES+ syntax and a component-based architecture. You will use Vue Router to make the app multi-page and Vuex to manage application state. Finally, you will learn how to use Laravel Passport for authenticated AJAX requests between Vue and the API, completing the full-stack architecture. Vuebnb will then be prepared for production and deployed to a free Heroku cloud server.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Public interface


The final piece of our web service is the public interface that will allow a client app to request the listing data. Since the Vuebnb listing page is designed to display one listing at a time, we'll at least need an endpoint to retrieve a single listing.

Let's now create a route that will match any incoming GET requests to the URI /api/listing/{listing} where {listing} is an ID. We'll put this in the routes/api.php file, where routes are automatically given the /api/ prefix and have middleware optimized for use in a web service by default.

We'll use a closure function to handle the route. The function will have a $listing argument, which we'll type hint as an instance of the Listing class, that is, our model. Laravel's service container will resolve this as an instance with the ID matching {listing}.

We can then encode the model as JSON and return it as a response.

routes/api.php:

<?php

use App\Listing;

Route::get('listing/{listing}', function(Listing $listing) {
  return...