Co-authored-by: Daniel Roe <daniel@roe.dev>
2.7 KiB
Head Management
Out-of-the-box, Nuxt provides good default values for charset
and viewport
meta tags, but you can override these if you need to, as well as customize other meta tags for your site in several different ways.
:ReadMore{link="/api/configuration/nuxt.config#head"}
useHead
Composable
Within your setup
function, you can call useHead
with an object of meta properties with keys corresponding to meta tags: title
, titleTemplate
, base
, script
, style
, meta
and link
, as well as htmlAttrs
and bodyAttrs
. There are also two shorthand properties, charset
and viewport
, which set the corresponding meta tags. Alternatively, you can pass a function returning the object for reactive metadata.
For example:
<script setup>
useHead({
titleTemplate: 'My App - %s',
// or, instead:
// titleTemplate: (title) => `My App - ${title}`,
viewport: 'width=device-width, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1',
charset: 'utf-8',
meta: [
{ name: 'description', content: 'My amazing site.' }
],
bodyAttrs: {
class: 'test'
}
})
</script>
::ReadMore{link="/api/composables/use-head"} ::
Meta Components
Nuxt provides <Title>
, <Base>
, <Script>
, <Style>
, <Meta>
, <Link>
, <Body>
, <Html>
and <Head>
components so that you can interact directly with your metadata within your component's template.
Because these component names match native HTML elements, it is very important that they are capitalized in the template.
<Head>
and <Body>
can accept nested meta tags (for aesthetic reasons) but this has no effect on where the nested meta tags are rendered in the final HTML.
For example:
<script setup>
const title = ref('Hello World')
</script>
<template>
<div>
<Head>
<Title>{{ title }}</Title>
<Meta name="description" :content="title" />
<Style type="text/css" children="body { background-color: green; }" />
</Head>
<h1>{{ title }}</h1>
</div>
</template>
Example: usage with definePageMeta
You can use definePageMeta
along with useHead
to set metadata based on the current route.
For example, you can first set the current page title (this is extracted at build time via a macro, so it can't be set dynamically):
<script setup>
definePageMeta({
title: 'Some Page'
})
</script>
And then in your layout file, you might use the route's metadata you have previously set:
<script setup>
const route = useRoute()
useHead({
meta: [{ name: 'og:title', content: `App Name - ${route.meta.title}` }]
})
</script>
:LinkExample{link="/examples/composables/use-head"}