You can use `<NuxtLayout />` component to activate `default` layout on `app.vue` or `error.vue`.
```vue [/app.vue]
<template>
<NuxtLayout>
some page content
</NuxtLayout>
</template>
```
`<NuxtLayout />` can be used to override `default` layout on `app.vue`, `error.vue` or even page components found in the `/pages` directory.
## `name` prop
`<NuxtLayout />` component accepts the `name` prop, which you can pass to use a non-default layout, where `name` can be a static string, reactive reference or a computed property. It **must** match the name of the corresponding layout file in the `/layouts` directory.
Please note the layout name is normalized to kebab-case, so if your layout file is named `errorLayout.vue`, it will become `error-layout` when passed as a `name` property to `<NuxtLayout />`.
`NuxtLayout` also accepts any additional props that you may need to pass to the layout. These custom props are then made accessible as attributes.
```vue[pages/some-page.vue]
<div>
<NuxtLayoutname="custom"title="I am a custom layout">
</NuxtLayout>
</div>
```
In the above example, the value of `title` will be available using `$attrs.title` in the template or `useAttrs().title` in `<script setup>` at custom.vue.
```vue[layouts/custom.vue]
<scriptsetuplang="ts">
const layoutCustomProps = useAttrs()
console.log(layoutCustomProps.title) // I am a custom layout
`<NuxtLayout />` renders incoming content via `<slot />`, which is then wrapped around Vue’s `<Transition />` component to activate layout transition. For this to work as expected, it is recommended that `<NuxtLayout />` is **not** the root element of the page component.
```vue [pages/index.vue]
<template>
<div>
<NuxtLayoutname="custom">
<template#header> Some header template content. </template>