Skip to content

πŸ–‡ Generate local scopes in templates to compute data from other scoped slots or simply to have variables in templates

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

posva/vue-local-scope

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

Β 

History

28 Commits
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 

Repository files navigation

vue-local-scope Build Status npm package coverage thanks

πŸ–‡ Generate local scopes in templates to compute data from other scoped slots

Installation

npm install vue-local-scope

Why?

When using scoped slots you often get access to data only in the template. But sometimes, you still need to apply transformation to that data, like calling a map on an array or a filter. Here is an example using Vue Promised to fetch information from an API endpoint:

<template>
  <Promised :promise="usersPromise" v-slot="users">
    <div>
      <Autocomplete v-model="selectedUsers" :items="users.map(user => ({ value: user.id, label: user.name })) /">
      <SelectedUsers :users="selectedUsers.map(user => users.find(u => u.id === user.value))" />
    </div>
  </Promised>
</template>

This approach has multiple issues:

  • The map functions are called everytime the component renders even if the array users didn't change
  • If you need the mapped version of users in multiple places you will duplicate the code and calls of map
  • There is too much code written in the template, it should definitely go in the script section

Vue Local Scope solve these problems with components and scoped slots.

Usage

Vue Local Scope exports two things:

  • LocalScope: a functional component that pass down any prop into a scoped slot
  • createLocalScope a function that returns a regular components with computed properties provided as a scoped slot

LocalScope

LocalScope doesn't generate any DOM node by itself, it renders whatever is passed as a scoped slot. It allows you to not duplicate your code but still present the first and third problem discussed in the Why section. You can pass any prop to it, usually applying some kind of transformation, like a map or a reduce, that transformation is only applied once everytime the template renders, and it allows you to have a local variable based on anything that exists in the template. This is useful for data coming from a v-slot:

<template>
  <div>
    <DataProvider v-slot="items">
      <LocalScope
        :names="items.map(i => i.name)"
        :ids="items.map(i => i.id)"
        v-slot="{ names, ids }"
      >
        <!-- we are able to use the mapped names three times but we only run map once -->
        <DisplayNames :names="names" @handle-change="updateNames(ids, names)" />
        <p>{{ names }}</p>
        <p>{{ ids }}</p>
      </LocalScope>
    </DataProvider>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import { LocalScope } from 'vue-local-scope'

export default {
  // other options
  components: { LocalScope },
}
</script>

Because LocalScope is a functional component, you can return any amount of elements but it will call map everytime something in the same template changes.

createLocalScope

createLocalScope is a function that generates a component to hold computed properties and provide them in a scoped slot. It is less convenient than LocalScope but because it generates a stateful component it benefits from caching in computed properties. It also exposes the data through a scoped slot:

<template>
  <div>
    <!-- Here we are intentionally using the same variable name `others` to shadow the variable inside NamesAndIdsScope -->
    <DataProvider v-slot="{ items, others }">
      <NamesAndIdsScope :items="items" :others="others" v-slot="{ name, ids, others }">
        <DisplayNames :names="names" @handle-change="updateNames(ids, names)" />
        <p>{{ names }}</p>
        <p>{{ ids }}</p>
        <p>{{ others }}</p>
      </NamesAndIdsScope>
    </DataProvider>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import { createLocalScope } from 'vue-local-scope'

const NamesAndIdsScope = createLocalScope({
  names: ({ items }) => items.map(i => i.name),
  ids: ({ items }) => items.map(i => i.id),
  // we don't need to transform items but we need it as a prop
  items: false,
  // we can also override a value directly
  // others is a prop and will appear in the `v-slot` variable as `others`
  others: ({ others }) => others.filter(o => !o.skip),
})

export default {
  // other options
  components: { NamesAndIdsScope },
}
</script>

In this case we do get the benefit from computed properties caching but NamesAndIdsScope creates a root element to group the content under it.

API

createLocalScope(computed, propsOptions?): Component

  • computed: object of transformations applied to props
  • propsOptions optional object to define propOptions for each key in computed

Related

License

MIT

About

πŸ–‡ Generate local scopes in templates to compute data from other scoped slots or simply to have variables in templates

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published