Co-authored-by: Pooya Parsa <pooya@pi0.io>
4.0 KiB
icon | title | head.title |
---|---|---|
IconDirectory | plugins | Plugins Directory |
Plugins Directory
Nuxt will automatically read the files in your plugins
directory and load them. 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:
plugins
| - myPlugin.ts
| - myOtherPlugin
| --- supportingFile.ts
| --- componentToRegister.vue
| --- index.ts
Only myPlugin.ts
and myOtherPlugin/index.ts
would be registered.
Creating Plugins
The only argument passed to a plugin is nuxtApp
.
export default defineNuxtPlugin(nuxtApp => {
// Doing something with nuxtApp
})
Using Composables Within Plugins
You can use composables within Nuxt plugins:
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 sequencially and before everything else. You might use a composable that dependants on another plugin which is not 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:
export default defineNuxtPlugin(() => {
return {
provide: {
hello: (msg: string) => `Hello ${msg}!`
}
}
})
In another file you can use this:
<template>
<div>
{{ $hello('world') }}
</div>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
// alternatively, you can also use it here
const { $hello } = useNuxtApp()
</script>
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:
declare module '#app' {
interface NuxtApp {
$hello (msg: string): string
}
}
declare module '@vue/runtime-core' {
interface ComponentCustomProperties {
$hello (msg: string): string
}
}
export { }
Vue Plugins
If you want to use Vue plugins, like vue-gtag to add Google Analytics tags, you can use a Nuxt plugin to do so.
There is an Open RFC to make this even easier! See nuxt/framework#1175
First, install the plugin you want.
yarn add --dev vue-gtag-next
Then create a plugin file plugins/vue-gtag.client.js
.
import VueGtag from 'vue-gtag-next'
export default defineNuxtPlugin((nuxtApp) => {
nuxtApp.vueApp.use(VueGtag, {
property: {
id: 'GA_MEASUREMENT_ID'
}
})
})
Vue Directives
Similarly, you can register a custom Vue directive in a plugin. For example, in plugins/directive.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="/examples/app/plugins"}