Nuxt/docs/content/7.migration/1.overview.md
Yaël Guilloux dc47c64f14
docs: use nuxt 3 and website theme (#5479)
Co-authored-by: Daniel Roe <daniel@roe.dev>
Co-authored-by: Sébastien Chopin <seb@nuxtjs.com>
Co-authored-by: Pooya Parsa <pooya@pi0.io>
Co-authored-by: pooya parsa <pyapar@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Clément Ollivier <clement.o2p@gmail.com>
2022-10-06 11:15:30 +02:00

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# Overview
Nuxt 3 is a complete rewrite of Nuxt 2, and also based on a new set of underlying technologies.
That means there will be significant changes when migrating a Nuxt 2 app to Nuxt 3, although you can expect migration to become more straightforward as we move toward a stable release.
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Nuxt 3 is now in release candidate stage. The main goal of the release candidate stage is to **increase the adoption rate of Nuxt 3** and **increase stability**. However, it is still in continued development. Read more about [Nuxt 3 release candidate status](https://github.com/nuxt/framework/discussions/3447).
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This migration guide is under progress to align with the development of Nuxt 3.
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Some of these significant changes include:
1. Moving from Vue 2 to Vue 3, including defaulting to the Composition API and script setup.
1. Moving from webpack 4 and Babel to Vite or webpack 5 and esbuild.
1. Moving from a runtime Nuxt dependency to a minimal, standalone server compiled with nitropack.
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If you need to remain on Nuxt 2, but want to benefit from Nuxt 3 features in Nuxt 2, you can alternatively check out [how to get started with Bridge](/bridge).
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