Book Image

Vue.js 3 Cookbook

By : Heitor Ramon Ribeiro
Book Image

Vue.js 3 Cookbook

By: Heitor Ramon Ribeiro

Overview of this book

Vue.js is a progressive web framework for building professional user interfaces for your web applications. With Vue.js 3, the frontend framework is reinforced with architectural enhancements, new base languages, new render processes, and separated core components. The book starts with recipes for implementing Vue.js 3’s new features in your web development projects and migrating your existing Vue.js apps to the latest version. You will get up and running with TypeScript with Vue.js and find succinct solutions to common challenges and pitfalls faced in implementing components, derivatives, and animation, through to building plugins, adding state management, routing, and developing complete single-page applications (SPAs). As you advance, you'll discover recipes to help you integrate Vue.js apps with Nuxt.js in order to add server-side rendering capabilities to your SPAs. You'll then learn about the Vue.js ecosystem by exploring modern frameworks such as Quasar, Nuxt.js, Vuex, and Vuetify in your web projects. Finally, the book provides you with solutions for packaging and deploying your Vue.js apps. By the end of this Vue.js book, you'll be able to identify and solve challenges faced in building Vue.js applications and be able to adopt the Vue.js framework for frontend web projects of any scale.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
5
Fetching Data from the Web via HTTP Requests
6
Managing Routes with vue-router
7
Managing the Application State with Vuex
11
Directives, Plugins, SSR, and More
Vue

How it works...

In this recipe, we created a wrapper for the Fetch API that is presented on the window element. This wrapper consists of a currying and closure function, where the first function receives the URL data, method, and options for the Fetch API, and the resulting function is the Fetch API response translator.

In the wrapper, the first part of the function will create our fetch request. There, we need to check whether it's a GET method, so we just need to execute it with the url parameter and omit the others. The second part of the function is responsible for the conversion of the fetch response. It will switch between the type parameter and execute the retrieving function according to the correct one.

To receive the final data for your request, you always need to call the response translator after the request, as in the following example:

getHttp('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1',
'json').then((response) => { console.log(response...