5.0 KiB
description |
---|
Nuxt auto-imports helper functions, composables and Vue APIs. |
Auto imports
Nuxt auto-imports helper functions, composables and Vue APIs to use across your application without explicitly importing them. Based on the directory structure, every Nuxt application can also use auto-imports for its own components, composables and plugins. Components, composables or plugins can use these functions.
Contrary to a classic global declaration, Nuxt preserves typings and IDEs completions and hints, and only includes what is actually used in your production code.
::alert{type=info icon=💡} In the documentation, every function that is not explicitly imported is auto-imported by Nuxt and can be used as-is in your code. You can find a reference for auto-imported composables and utilities in the API section. ::
::alert{type=info}
In the server directory, we auto import exported functions and variables from server/utils/
.
::
::alert
You can also auto-import functions exported from custom folders or third-party packages by configuring the imports
section of your nuxt.config
file.
::
Built-in Auto-imports
Nuxt Auto-imports
Nuxt auto-imports functions and composables to perform data fetching, get access to the app context and runtime config, manage state or define components and plugins.
<script setup>
/* useAsyncData() and $fetch() are auto-imported */
const { data, refresh, pending } = await useAsyncData('/api/hello', () => $fetch('/api/hello'))
</script>
Vue Auto-imports
Vue 3 exposes Reactivity APIs like ref
or computed
, as well as lifecycle hooks and helpers that are auto-imported by Nuxt.
<script setup>
/* ref() and computed() are auto-imported */
const count = ref(1)
const double = computed(() => count.value * 2)
</script>
Using Vue and Nuxt composables
When you are using the built-in Composition API composables provided by Vue and Nuxt, be aware that many of them rely on being called in the right context.
During a component lifecycle, Vue tracks the temporary instance of the current component (and similarly, Nuxt tracks a temporary instance of nuxtApp
) via a global variable, and then unsets it in same tick. This is essential when server rendering, both to avoid cross-request state pollution (leaking a shared reference between two users) and to avoid leakage between different components.
That means that (with very few exceptions) you cannot use them outside a Nuxt plugin, Nuxt route middleware or Vue setup function. On top of that, you must use them synchronously - that is, you cannot use await
before calling a composable, except within <script setup>
blocks, in defineNuxtPlugin
or in defineNuxtRouteMiddleware
, where we perform a transform to keep the synchronous context even after the await
.
If you get an error message like Nuxt instance is unavailable
then it probably means you are calling a Nuxt composable in the wrong place in the Vue or Nuxt lifecycle.
See the full explanation in this comment.
::NeedContribution ::
Example
Example: Breaking code:
// trying to access runtime config outside a composable
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
export const useMyComposable = () => {
// accessing runtime config here
}
Example: Fixing the error:
export const useMyComposable = () => {
// Because your composable is called in the right place in the lifecycle,
// useRuntimeConfig will also work
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
// ...
}
Directory-based Auto-imports
Nuxt directly auto-imports files created in defined directories:
components/
for Vue components.composables/
for Vue composables.utils/
for helper functions and other utilities.
Explicit Imports
Nuxt exposes every auto-import with the #imports
alias that can be used to make the import explicit if needed:
<script setup>
import { ref, computed } from '#imports'
const count = ref(1)
const double = computed(() => count.value * 2)
</script>
Disable Auto-imports
In case you want to disable auto-imports, you can set imports.autoImport
to false
in your nuxt.config.ts
.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
imports: {
autoImport: false
}
})
This will disable implicit auto imports completely but it's still possible to use Explicit Imports.