4.9 KiB
Component Options
asyncData
and fetch
component options
Nuxt 3 provides new options for fetching data from an API.
Isomorphic fetch
In Nuxt 2 you might use @nuxtjs/axios
or @nuxt/http
to fetch your data - or just the polyfilled global fetch
.
In Nuxt 3 you can use a globally available fetch
method that has the same API as the Fetch API or $fetch
method which is using unjs/ohmyfetch. It has a number of benefits, including:
-
It will handle 'smartly' making direct API calls if it's running on the server, or making a client-side call to your API if it's running on the client. (It can also handle calling third-party APIs.)
-
Plus, it comes with convenience features including automatically parsing responses and stringifying data.
You can read more about direct API calls or fetching data.
Using composables
Nuxt 3 provides new composables for fetching data: useAsyncData
and useFetch
. They each have 'lazy' variants (useLazyAsyncData
and useLazyFetch
), which do not block client-side navigation.
In Nuxt 2, you'd fetch your data in your component using a syntax similar to:
export default {
async asyncData({ params, $http }) {
const post = await $http.$get(`https://api.nuxtjs.dev/posts/${params.id}`)
return { post }
},
// or alternatively
fetch () {
this.post = await $http.$get(`https://api.nuxtjs.dev/posts/${params.id}`)
}
}
Within your methods and templates, you could use the post
variable similar how you'd use any other piece of data provided by your component.
With Nuxt 3, you can perform this data fetching using composables in your setup()
method or <script setup>
tag:
<script setup>
// Define params wherever, through `defineProps()`, `useRoute()`, etc.
const { data: post, refresh } = await useAsyncData('post', () => $fetch(`https://api.nuxtjs.dev/posts/${params.id}`) )
// Or instead - useFetch is a convenience wrapper around useAsyncData when you're just performing a simple fetch
const { data: post, refresh } = await useFetch(`https://api.nuxtjs.dev/posts/${paramsÌ.id}`)
</script>
You can now use post
inside of your Nuxt 3 template, or call refresh
to update the data.
::alert{type=info}
Despite the names, useFetch
is not a direct replacement of the fetch()
hook. Rather, useAsyncData
replaces both hooks and is most customizable; it can do more than simply fetching data from an endpoint. useFetch
is a convenience wrapper around useAsyncData
for simply fetching data from an endpoint.
::
Migration
- Replace the
asyncData
hook withuseAsyncData
oruseFetch
in your page/component. - Replace the
fetch
hook withuseAsyncData
oruseFetch
in your component.
head
See meta tag migration.
key
You can now define a key within the definePageMeta
compiler macro.
- <script>
- export default {
- key: 'index'
- // or a method
- // key: route => route.fullPath
- }
+ <script setup>
+ definePageMeta({
+ key: 'index'
+ // or a method
+ // key: route => route.fullPath
+ })
</script>
Migration
- Migrate
key
from component options todefinePageMeta
.
layout
See layout migration.
loading
This feature is not yet supported in Nuxt 3.
middleware
See middleware migration.
scrollToTop
This feature is not yet supported in Nuxt 3. If you want to overwrite the default scroll behavior of vue-router
, you can do so in ~/app/router.options.ts
(see docs) for more info.
transition
See layout migration.
validate
There is no longer a validate hook in Nuxt 3. Instead, you can create a custom middleware function, or directly throw an error in the setup function of the page.
- <script>
- export default {
- async validate({ params, query, store }) {
- return true // if valid
- }
- }
+ <script setup>
+ definePageMeta({
+ middleware: [
+ async function (to, from) {
+ const nuxtApp = useNuxtApp()
+ if (!valid) {
+ return abortNavigation('Page not found')
+ }
+ }
+ ]
+ })
</script>
watchQuery
This is not supported in Nuxt 3. Instead, you can directly use a watcher to trigger refetching data.
<script setup>
const route = useRoute()
const { data, refresh } = await useFetch('/api/user')
watch(() => route.query, () => refresh())
</script>