I'm starting to work with laravel and I try to use Vue. So on my resources/assets/js/app.js I have
Vue.component('example', require('./components/Example.vue'));
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app'
});
So my Example.vue is basicly what it's given with laravel. And in my welcome.blad I have
#extends('layouts.app')
#section('content')
<example>
</example>
#endsection
<script src="{{ elixir('js/app.js') }}"></script>
in my package.json I have :
"devDependencies": {
"vue": "^2.1.10",
"vue-resource": "^1.0.3"
}
But Nothing appear in my welcome page. I ran npm install npm run dev And change several things in my script, don't remember all but tried a lot of things and can't make it work
Laravel includes in the stock templates some default handling for CSRF tokens.
Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'csrfToken' of undefined
means you've taken this out or broken it in some way, preventing the rest of the JS from running.
Related
Installed vue js with node modules for laravel 5.4 project but the components are not displayed after I run npm run watch
Installed npm, installed vue.js added vue.js file example in app.js, npm run watch - no result
blade template file
<div id="app">
<h1>Test</h1>
<h2>asda</h2>
<example-component></example-component>
</div>
App.js
import Vue from 'vue';
Vue.component('example-component',
require('./components/ExampleComponent.vue'));
//Set toaster duration
Vue.config.productionTip = false
new Vue({
el: '#app',
components: {
}
})
The component should be loaded after page refresh but is not. No any error messages in console.
If you are using Webpack, you should append the require(...) with .default so it becomes require(...).default. Example in Laravel Git
Make sure that you export default in your components. Example in Laravel Git
In Laravel projects prior to 5.3 I've utilised Vue.js using the script tag like this:
<script type="text/javascript" src="../js/vue.js"></script>
I would then create a Vue instance specific for that page like this:
<script>
new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: {
message: 'Hello Vue.js!'
}
});
</script>
and then bind it to the relevant div#id in my HTML.
Now, in Laravel 5.3 Vue.js comes bundled and I am fully aware that I can use components as described in the docs by using gulp/elixir, however, my question is if I want to create a Vue.js instance like I just mentioned, i.e. where I create a Vue.js instance strictly for a given page (not a component) how do I do it?
Do I set it up like I used to by importing the vue.js library in a script tag or can I use generated app.js?
Am I not supposed to do it this way, should I be creating components for everything?
For me, it doesn't make sense to make a component for something I am only using once - I thought the purpose of components was that they are reusable - you can use it in more than one place. As mentioned in the Vue.js docs:
Components are one of the most powerful features of Vue.js. They help you extend basic HTML elements to encapsulate reusable code.
Any advice would be appreciated, thanks!
I'd leave Laravel the way it comes, with Webpack. This gives you the ability to add some good Webpack configuration. Plus gulp watch works inside the Homestead vagrant VM now since it will be using Webpack to watch the file changes. And also check out async components.
Now on to your question regarding separate Vue instances per page...let's start with app.js...
App.js
When you first install Laravel 5.3, you'll find an app.js entry point. Let's comment out the main Vue instance:
resources/assets/js/app.js
/**
* First we will load all of this project's JavaScript dependencies which
* include Vue and Vue Resource. This gives a great starting point for
* building robust, powerful web applications using Vue and Laravel.
*/
require('./bootstrap');
/**
* Next, we will create a fresh Vue application instance and attach it to
* the page. Then, you may begin adding components to this application
* or customize the JavaScript scaffolding to fit your unique needs.
*/
Vue.component('example', require('./components/Example.vue'));
// Let's comment this out, each page will be its own main Vue instance.
//
// const app = new Vue({
// el: '#app'
// });
The app.js file still remains a place to for global stuff, so components added here are available (such as the example component seen above) to any page script that includes it.
Welcome Page Script
Now let's create a script that represents a Welcome Page:
resources/assets/js/pages/welcome.js
require('../app')
import Greeting from '../components/Greeting.vue'
var app = new Vue({
name: 'App',
el: '#app',
components: { Greeting },
data: {
test: 'This is from the welcome page component'
}
})
Blog Page Script
Now let's create another script that represents a Blog Page:
resources/assets/js/pages/blog.js
require('../app')
import Greeting from '../components/Greeting.vue'
var app = new Vue({
name: 'App',
el: '#app',
components: { Greeting },
data: {
test: 'This is from the blog page component'
}
})
Greeting Component
resources/assets/js/components/Greeting.vue
<template>
<div class="greeting">
{{ message }}
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'Greeting',
data: () => {
return {
message: 'This is greeting component'
}
}
}
</script>
Welcome Blade View
Let's update the welcome blade view that ships with Laravel:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<title>Laravel</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="app">
<example></example>
#{{ pageMessage }}
<greeting></greeting>
</div>
<script src="/js/welcome.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
The idea would be the same for the blog view.
Elixir
Now bring it all together in your gulp file using Elixir's ability to merge Webpack config options with its own (read more about that here):
gulpfile.js
const elixir = require('laravel-elixir');
require('laravel-elixir-vue-2');
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Elixir Asset Management
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Elixir provides a clean, fluent API for defining some basic Gulp tasks
| for your Laravel application. By default, we are compiling the Sass
| file for our application, as well as publishing vendor resources.
|
*/
elixir(mix => {
var config = elixir.webpack.mergeConfig({
entry: {
welcome: './resources/assets/js/pages/welcome.js',
blog: './resources/assets/js/pages/blog.js'
},
output: {
filename: '[name].js' // Template based on keys in entry above
}
});
mix.sass('app.scss')
.webpack('app.js', null, null, null, config);
});
Run gulp or gulp watch and you'll see both welcome.js and blog.js published.
Thoughts
I'm currently going the SPA route when it comes to "web apps" and just using Laravel as the backend API (or any other language/framework). I've seen some examples where Vue SPA is built in Laravel, but I really think it should be a completely seperate repo/project, independent of the backend. There's no Laravel/PHP templating views involved in an SPA, so build out the SPA separately. BTW, the SPA would have "page" components (which are usually called by VueRouter and of course would be made up of more nested components...see my example project link below).
However, for the "web site" I think Laravel is still a good choice for serving blade views and no need to go SPA for that. You can do what I've described in this answer. Also, you can connect your website to your webapp. On your website, you would have a "login" link that will take a user from the website to the webapp SPA to login. Your website remains SEO friendly (although there is good proof that Google is seeing content on SPA javascript sites as well).
For a look at an SPA approach, I've put up an example in Vue 2.0 here: https://github.com/prograhammer/example-vue-project (it works great, but still in progress).
Edit:
You may want to also checkout the Commons Chunk Plugin. This way browsers can cache some shared module dependencies separately. Webpack automatically can pull out shared imported dependencies and put them in a separate file. So that you have a both a common.js(shared stuff) and a welcome.js on a page. Then on another page you would again have common.js and blog.js and the browser can reuse the cached common.js.
If you want to incorporate vuejs into app.js using gulp then you can do it with elixir:
Firstly, you need laravel-elixir-browserify-official from npm:
npm install laravel-elixir-browserify-official
Then place the following in package.json:
"browserify": {
"transform": [
"vueify",
"babelify"
]
}
Your resources/assets/js/app.js file would then just need:
require('./bootstrap');
The bootstrap.js file should be in the "resources/assets/js" folder. I can't remember if this got installed with passport in my application, so if you don't have it then laravel provided the following code for "bootstrap.js":
window._ = require('lodash');
/**
* We'll load jQuery and the Bootstrap jQuery plugin which provides support
* for JavaScript based Bootstrap features such as modals and tabs. This
* code may be modified to fit the specific needs of your application.
*/
window.$ = window.jQuery = require('jquery');
require('bootstrap-sass');
/**
* Vue is a modern JavaScript library for building interactive web interfaces
* using reactive data binding and reusable components. Vue's API is clean
* and simple, leaving you to focus on building your next great project.
*/
window.Vue = require('vue');
require('vue-resource');
/**
* We'll register a HTTP interceptor to attach the "CSRF" header to each of
* the outgoing requests issued by this application. The CSRF middleware
* included with Laravel will automatically verify the header's value.
*/
Vue.http.interceptors.push((request, next) => {
request.headers['X-CSRF-TOKEN'] = Laravel.csrfToken;
next();
});
/**
* Echo exposes an expressive API for subscribing to channels and listening
* for events that are broadcast by Laravel. Echo and event broadcasting
* allows your team to easily build robust real-time web applications.
*/
// import Echo from "laravel-echo"
// window.Echo = new Echo({
// broadcaster: 'pusher',
// key: 'your-pusher-key'
// });
Now in gulpfile.js you can use:
elixir(function(mix) {
mix.browserify('app.js');
});
And in your HTML you would have:
...
<div id="app">
#{{message}}
</div>
...
<script type="text/javascript">
new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: {
message: 'Hello Vue.js!'
}
});
</script>
Now just run gulp
If you are not using elixir then you should be able to do a similar thing with the browserify or webpack packages from npm.
Edit
To answer your updated question, you can of course use vue.js for a single page. I personally use knockout for this stuff (I'm using vue because laravel passport uses it), but architecturally they are the same - they are MVVM libraries.
The point in MVVM is to bind your view to an underlying data model, so when one updates the other is automatically updated (i.e. updates in the dom automatically update the model and vice verser). Vue components are a simple way to reuse blocks of code, which is really good for creating widgets or complex components, but if you are simply looking to render data from a view model on to your page, then you would not usually need to create a component for that.
As for generating app.js, this entirely depends on your project. You cannot bind more than one view model to a view, so if you plan on using multiple view models in your project you would need to find a way to include the specific view model for your page. To achieve that I would probably remove the view model from app.js and keep the bootstrap and registered components there, then create separate view models that would need to be included on each page.
If you are on Laravel 5.5 and beyond, here is the best solution if you want to utilize the power of Blade but still enjoy reactive of VueJS
https://stackoverflow.com/a/54349029/417899
I have installed vue.js by following these steps in Laravel 5.6 and all other dependencies are working perfectly. Only Vue.js is not responding.
npm intall
npm run dev
npm run watch
I am sharing all the codes on I have added. I have created a id="app" in my html file.
<div id="app">
<div class="container">
<articles></articles>
</div>
<!-- I used this link in my html file for connecting with app.js file
-->
<script src="{{asset('js/app.js')}}"></script>
I edited the app.js file that is as under.
require('./bootstrap');
window.Vue = require('vue');
Vue.component('articles', require('./components/Articles.vue')
);
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app'
});
I also created Articles.vue file and linked that to app.js. But my html page is showing nothing.
My file in components/Articles.Vue
<template>
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
</template>
Console is showing no errors
Vue Tab
When I inspect DOM, I get this
This is the Vue file. It is also not showing any tags
As ceejayoz said in the comment: Rename it to e.g. articleElement and use it as <article-element></article-element>
this thread is a bit old, but as i had the same problem as you had (maybe we both watched the same youtube video "Full Stack Vue.js & Laravel"), i will still share my solution. With some research and a lot of trying around i landed on the official Laravel page (https://laravel-mix.com/docs/6.0/what-is-mix).
The last task of this guide "npx mix" did the job for me. Everytime i change some of my js files now i use this little command to compile again and all my changes take place.
Hopefully this will help some others too :)
Wouldn't it be nice if we could also leverage Nova components (Index, Forms, Detail page, Cards or Tools from novapackages.com) in our external application too and not just be restricted to the nova admin panel?
1- Basically, we would just add the scripts and css for Nova in our layout.blade.php
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ mix('app.css', 'nova-assets') }}">
<script src="{{ mix('app.js', 'nova-assets') }}"></script>
2- Then we would be able to use the Nova components like for example, resource-index.
In our blade.php views
#section('content')
My own custom content
<resource-index :resource-name="'Post'"></resource-index>
#endcontent
Or in our app.js
require('./bootstrap');
window.Vue = require('vue');
Vue.component('example-component', require('./nova/ResourceIndex.vue'));
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app'
});
Does anyone know how we could leverage Nova's components and packages outside of the admin panel and in our main application?
I am working in Laravel 5.4, and Vue components are not showing/updating.
I start a new project and create a route /chat in web.php
This is chat.blade.php
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/app.css">
</head>
<body>
<div id="app">
<example></example>
<chat></chat>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.Laravel = { csrfToken: '{{ csrf_token() }}' };
</script>
<script src="js/app.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
This is app.js
require('./bootstrap');
Vue.component('example', require('./components/Example.vue'));
Vue.component('chat', require('./components/Chat.vue'));
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app'
});
Example and Chat components are some basic templates, I am not passing any data, just plain text.
Chat.vue
<template lang="html">
<div id="content">
<h1>Messages</h1>
<p>Message text</p>
<small>Hiii</small>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
}
</script>
When I run php artisan for the first time, everything works. I try to edit some text in Chat.vue, like change 'Hiiii' to Hello, when I reload the page it won't change, it just stays the same. I tried restarting the pc, running php artisan again, anything I could think of.
I tried putting some Vue code directly in chat.blade.php, and than it works. It looks like it is not detecting changes in app.js and components.
FYI, I even deleted the Example.vue component. It still appeared on the page.
The best way to solve this problem is to update npm because it will update all the packages and install missing packages, as a result you will have laravel mix compiling your assets; right now you are not able to do so.
npm update
For some people an easier solution can work which is to run the watch-pol command
npm run watch-poll
Have you tried to clear browser cache? This should solve the problem.
everyone I just got the answer and I want to share this with everyone.
Problem:- I am learning Vue js and I need to delete browser history every day to see changes I have made in the editor.so I search for that and not found a valuable answer for this. but as now I got the solution so I decided to share this solution with everyone.
all you need to do is
1)Go to developer tools.
2)Click on the Network tab
3)Click disable cache (Look at the highlighted portion in the image below)
4)Refresh your page again!
Sometime copying code from internet we add some unwanted line.
Just check this line from App/Config/app .
Make sure it is in Development mode.
'env' => env('APP_ENV', 'development'),
copy this code in app.blade.php :
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app'
});