.. | ||
pages | ||
nuxt.config.js | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Async data with Nuxt.js
data (context)
Nuxt.js supercharges the
data
method from vue.js to let you handle async operation before setting the component data.
data
is called every time before loading the component (only if attached to a route). It can be called from the server-side or before navigating to the corresponding route.
The data
method receives the context as the first argument, you can use it to fetch some data and return the component data. To make the data method asynchronous, Nuxt.js offers you 2 ways, choose the one you're the most familiar with:
- returning a
Promise
, Nuxt.js will wait for the promise to be resolved before rendering the Component - Define a second argument which is a callback method to be called like this:
callback(err, data)
Example with returning a Promise
:
export default {
data ({ params }) {
return axios.get(`https://my-api/posts/${params.id}`)
.then((res) => {
return { title: res.data.title }
})
}
}
Example with using the callback
argument:
export default {
data ({ params }, callback) {
axios.get(`https://my-api/posts/${params.id}`)
.then((res) => {
callback(null, { title: res.data.title })
})
}
}
And then, you can display the data inside your template:
<template>
<h1>{{ title }}</h1>
</template>
Context
List of all the available keys in context
:
Key | Type | Available | Description |
---|---|---|---|
isClient |
Boolean | Client & Server | Boolean to let you know if you're actually renderer from the client-side |
isServer |
Boolean | Client & Server | Boolean to let you know if you're actually renderer from the server-side |
isDev |
Boolean | Client & Server | Boolean to let you know if you're in dev mode, can be useful for caching some data in production |
route |
vue-router route | Client & Server | vue-router route instance see documentation |
store |
vuex store | Client & Server | Vuex.Store instance. Available only if store: true is set in nuxt.config.js |
params |
Object | Client & Server | Alias of route.params |
query |
Object | Client & Server | Alias of route.query |
req |
http.Request | Server | Request from the node.js server. If nuxt is used as a middleware, the req object might be different depending of the framework you're using. |
res |
http.Response | Server | Response from the node.js server. If nuxt is used as a middleware, the res object might be different depending of the framework you're using. |
redirect |
Function | Client & Server | Use this method to redirect the user to another route, the status code is used on the server-side, default to 302. redirect([status,] path [, query]) |
error |
Function | Client & Server | Use this method to show the error page: error(params) . The params should have the fields statusCode and message . |
Handling errors
Nuxt.js add the error(params)
method in the context
, you can call it to display the error page. params.statusCode
will be also used to render the proper status code form the server-side.
Example with a Promise
:
export default {
data ({ params, error }) {
return axios.get(`https://my-api/posts/${params.id}`)
.then((res) => {
return { title: res.data.title }
})
.catch((e) => {
error({ statusCode: 404, message: 'Post not found' })
})
}
}
If you're using the callback
argument, you can call it directly with the error, Nuxt.js will call the error
method for you:
export default {
data ({ params }, callback) {
axios.get(`https://my-api/posts/${params.id}`)
.then((res) => {
callback(null, { title: res.data.title })
})
.catch((e) => {
callback({ statusCode: 404, message: 'Post not found' })
})
}
}
Demo
npm install
npm start
Go to http://localhost:3000 and navigate trough the app.