--- navigation.icon: IconDirectory title: "plugins" description: "Nuxt reads the files in your plugins directory and loads them at the creation of the Vue application." head.title: "plugins/" --- # Plugins Directory Nuxt automatically reads the files in your `plugins` directory and loads them at the creation of the Vue application. You can use `.server` or `.client` suffix in the file name to load a plugin only on the server or client side. ::alert{type=warning} All plugins in your `plugins/` directory are auto-registered, so you should not add them to your `nuxt.config` separately. :: ## Which Files Are Registered Only files at the top level of the `plugins/` directory (or index files within any subdirectories) will be registered as plugins. For example: ```bash plugins | - myPlugin.ts // scanned | - myOtherPlugin | --- supportingFile.ts // not scanned | --- componentToRegister.vue // not scanned | --- index.ts // currently scanned but deprecated ``` Only `myPlugin.ts` and `myOtherPlugin/index.ts` would be registered. You can configure [`plugins`](/docs/api/configuration/nuxt-config#plugins-1) to include unscanned files. ## Creating Plugins The only argument passed to a plugin is [`nuxtApp`](/docs/api/composables/use-nuxt-app). ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin(nuxtApp => { // Doing something with nuxtApp }) ``` ### Object Syntax Plugins It is also possible to define a plugin using an object syntax, for more advanced use cases. For example: ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin({ name: 'my-plugin', enforce: 'pre', // or 'post' async setup (nuxtApp) { // this is the equivalent of a normal functional plugin }, hooks: { // You can directly register Nuxt app hooks here 'app:created'() { const nuxtApp = useNuxtApp() // } } }) ``` ::alert If you are using an object-syntax plugin, the properties may be statically analyzed in future to produce a more optimized build. So you should not define them at runtime. For example, setting `enforce: process.server ? 'pre' : 'post'` would defeat any future optimization Nuxt is able to do for your plugins. :: ## Plugin Registration Order You can control the order in which plugins are registered by prefixing with 'alphabetical' numbering to the file names. For example: ```bash plugins/ | - 01.myPlugin.ts | - 02.myOtherPlugin.ts ``` In this example, `02.myOtherPlugin.ts` will be able to access anything that was injected by `01.myPlugin.ts`. This is useful in situations where you have a plugin that depends on another plugin. ::alert{type=info icon=💡} In case you're new to 'alphabetical' numbering, remember that filenames are sorted as strings, not as numeric values. For example, `10.myPlugin.ts` would come before `2.myOtherPlugin.ts`. This is why the example prefixes single digit numbers with `0`. :: ## Loading strategy By default, Nuxt loads plugins sequentially. You can define a plugin as `parallel` so Nuxt won't wait the end of the plugin's execution before loading the next plugin. ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin({ name: 'my-plugin', parallel: true, async setup (nuxtApp) { // the next plugin will be executed immediatly } }) ``` ## Using Composables Within Plugins You can use [composables](/docs/guide/directory-structure/composables) within Nuxt plugins: ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin((NuxtApp) => { const foo = useFoo() }) ``` However, keep in mind there are some limitations and differences: **If a composable depends on another plugin registered later, it might not work.** **Reason:** Plugins are called in order sequentially and before everything else. You might use a composable that depends on another plugin which has not been called yet. **If a composable depends on the Vue.js lifecycle, it won't work.** **Reason:** Normally, Vue.js composables are bound to the current component instance while plugins are only bound to `nuxtApp` instance. ## Automatically Providing Helpers If you would like to provide a helper on the `NuxtApp` instance, return it from the plugin under a `provide` key. For example: ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin(() => { return { provide: { hello: (msg: string) => `Hello ${msg}!` } } }) ``` In another file you can use this: ```vue ``` ## Typing Plugins If you return your helpers from the plugin, they will be typed automatically; you'll find them typed for the return of `useNuxtApp()` and within your templates. ::alert If you need to use a provided helper _within_ another plugin, you can call `useNuxtApp()` to get the typed version. But in general, this should be avoided unless you are certain of the plugins' order. :: ### Advanced For advanced use-cases, you can declare the type of injected properties like this: ```ts [index.d.ts] declare module '#app' { interface NuxtApp { $hello (msg: string): string } } declare module 'vue' { interface ComponentCustomProperties { $hello (msg: string): string } } export { } ``` ::alert{type=warning} If you are using WebStorm, you may need to augment `@vue/runtime-core` until [this issue](https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/WEB-59818/VUE-TypeScript-WS-PS-does-not-correctly-display-type-of-globally-injected-properties) is resolved. :: ## Vue Plugins If you want to use Vue plugins, like [vue-gtag](https://github.com/MatteoGabriele/vue-gtag) to add Google Analytics tags, you can use a Nuxt plugin to do so. First, install the plugin you want. ```bash yarn add --dev vue-gtag-next ``` Then create a plugin file `plugins/vue-gtag.client.js`. ```ts import VueGtag, { trackRouter } from 'vue-gtag-next' export default defineNuxtPlugin((nuxtApp) => { nuxtApp.vueApp.use(VueGtag, { property: { id: 'GA_MEASUREMENT_ID' } }) trackRouter(useRouter()) }) ``` ## Vue Directives Similarly, you can register a custom Vue directive in a plugin. For example, in `plugins/directive.ts`: ```ts export default defineNuxtPlugin((nuxtApp) => { nuxtApp.vueApp.directive('focus', { mounted (el) { el.focus() }, getSSRProps (binding, vnode) { // you can provide SSR-specific props here return {} } }) }) ``` :ReadMore{link="https://vuejs.org/guide/reusability/custom-directives.html"} ::LinkExample{link="/docs/examples/app/plugins"} ::