@vitejs/plugin-vue
Note: as of vue
3.2.13+ and @vitejs/plugin-vue
1.9.0+, @vue/compiler-sfc
is no longer required as a peer dependency.
import vue from '@vitejs/plugin-vue'
export default {
plugins: [vue()],
}
For JSX / TSX support, @vitejs/plugin-vue-jsx
is also needed.
Options
export interface Options {
include?: string | RegExp | (string | RegExp)[]
exclude?: string | RegExp | (string | RegExp)[]
isProduction?: boolean
script?: Partial<
Pick<
SFCScriptCompileOptions,
| 'babelParserPlugins'
| 'globalTypeFiles'
| 'defineModel'
| 'propsDestructure'
| 'fs'
>
>
template?: Partial<
Pick<
SFCTemplateCompileOptions,
| 'compiler'
| 'compilerOptions'
| 'preprocessOptions'
| 'preprocessCustomRequire'
| 'transformAssetUrls'
>
>
style?: Partial<Pick<SFCStyleCompileOptions, 'trim'>>
customElement?: boolean | string | RegExp | (string | RegExp)[]
compiler?: typeof _compiler
}
Asset URL handling
When @vitejs/plugin-vue
compiles the <template>
blocks in SFCs, it also converts any encountered asset URLs into ESM imports.
For example, the following template snippet:
<img src="../image.png" />
Is the same as:
<script setup>
import _imports_0 from '../image.png'
</script>
<img :src="_imports_0" />
By default the following tag/attribute combinations are transformed, and can be configured using the template.transformAssetUrls
option.
{
video: ['src', 'poster'],
source: ['src'],
img: ['src'],
image: ['xlink:href', 'href'],
use: ['xlink:href', 'href']
}
Note that only attribute values that are static strings are transformed. Otherwise, you'd need to import the asset manually, e.g. import imgUrl from '../image.png'
.
Example for passing options to vue/compiler-sfc
:
import vue from '@vitejs/plugin-vue'
export default {
plugins: [
vue({
template: {
compilerOptions: {
},
transformAssetUrls: {
},
},
}),
],
}
Example for transforming custom blocks
import vue from '@vitejs/plugin-vue'
import yaml from 'js-yaml'
const vueI18nPlugin = {
name: 'vue-i18n',
transform(code, id) {
if (!/vue&type=i18n/.test(id)) {
return
}
if (/\.ya?ml$/.test(id)) {
code = JSON.stringify(yaml.load(code.trim()))
}
return `export default Comp => {
Comp.i18n = ${code}
}`
},
}
export default {
plugins: [vue(), vueI18nPlugin],
}
Create a file named Demo.vue
, add lang="yaml"
to the <i18n>
blocks, then you can use the syntax of YAML
:
<template>Hello</template>
<i18n lang="yaml">
message: 'world'
fullWord: 'hello world'
</i18n>
message
is mounted on the i18n property of the component instance, you can use like this:
<script setup lang="ts">
import Demo from 'components/Demo.vue'
</script>
<template>
<Demo /> {{ Demo.i18n.message }}
<div>{{ Demo.i18n.fullWord }}</div>
</template>
Using Vue SFCs as Custom Elements
Requires vue@^3.2.0
& @vitejs/plugin-vue@^1.4.0
Vue 3.2 introduces the defineCustomElement
method, which works with SFCs. By default, <style>
tags inside SFCs are extracted and merged into CSS files during build. However when shipping a library of custom elements, it may be desirable to inline the styles as JavaScript strings and inject them into the custom elements' shadow root instead.
Starting in 1.4.0, files ending with *.ce.vue
will be compiled in "custom elements" mode: its <style>
tags are compiled into inlined CSS strings and attached to the component as its styles
property:
import { defineCustomElement } from 'vue'
import Example from './Example.ce.vue'
console.log(Example.styles)
customElements.define('my-example', defineCustomElement(Example))
Note in custom elements mode there is no need to use <style scoped>
since the CSS is already scoped inside the shadow DOM.
The customElement
plugin option can be used to configure the behavior:
{ customElement: true }
will import all *.vue
files in custom element mode.- Use a string or regex pattern to change how files should be loaded as Custom Elements (this check is applied after
include
and exclude
matches).
License
MIT