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devextreme-vue
Advanced tools
This project allows you to use DevExtreme Vue Components.
You can try this live example, feature-based examples or configure local development environment as described below.
Node.js and npm are required
Install the devextreme and devextreme-vue npm packages:
npm install --save devextreme devextreme-vue
The further configuration steps depend on which build tool, bundler or module loader you are using:
Import DevExtreme modules in a DevExtreme component's file.
import DxButton from 'devextreme-vue/button';
DevExtreme themes can be imported only once in your application's main file:
import 'devextreme/dist/css/dx.common.css';
import 'devextreme/dist/css/dx.light.compact.css';
See the Predefined Themes guide for more information on DevExtreme themes.
You can use DevExtreme components in a single file component,
<template>
<dx-button :text='text'/>
</template>
<script>
import DxButton from 'devextreme-vue/button';
export default {
name: 'HelloWorld',
data() {
return {
text: 'Hello!'
};
},
components: {
DxButton
}
};
</script>
... in a jsx render function,
import Vue from 'vue';
import { DxButton } from 'devextreme-vue';
new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: function() {
return {
text: "Hello!"
}
},
render: function(h) {
return (
<DxButton text={this.text} />
)
}
});
... or directly in a vue template.
new Vue({
el: '#app',
components: { DxButton },
template: '<dx-button :text="text" />',
data() {
return {
text: 'Hello!'
};
}
});
The complete list of components and their APIs are described in the DevExtreme API Reference.
<dx-button text="Simple button" />
<dx-check-box :value="true" />
<dx-button :text="text" />
where :
is a shorthand for v-bind
directive.
Use the sync
modifier to bind a bindingProperty
to a widget option:
<dx-text-box :value.sync="bindingProperty" />
The DevExtreme Vue editors also support v-model
directive that creates two-way binding on the editor's value (for example, TextBox value):
<dx-text-box v-model="text" />
You can customize widget elements' appearance via the corresponding template properties.
To specify a DevExtreme Vue Component template's markup, use a named slot. You should also specify a slot scope to access the template element's data.
For instance, you can specify the itemTemplate:
<div id="app">
<dx-list :items="items">
<div slot="item" slot-scope="data">
<i>This is my template for {{data}}</i>
</div>
</dx-list>
</div>
import Vue from 'vue';
import DxList from 'devextreme-vue/list';
new Vue({
el: '#app',
components: { DxList },
data() {
return {
items: [1, 2, 3, 4]
};
}
});
item
is the default name of the dxList widget's item template. You can specify a custom name for the template and for your slot
:
<div id="app">
<dx-list :items="items" item-template="my-template">
<div slot="my-template" slot-scope="data">
<i>This is my template for {{data}}</i>
</div>
</dx-list>
</div>
The following widgets support putting a content directly to the widget's container:
For example, you can specify the ScrollView widget's content as follows:
<dx-scroll-view>
<div>Some scrollable content</div>
</dx-scroll-view>
You can subscribe to DevExtreme Component events using the Vue's v-on
directive (or @
shorthand)
<dx-text-box v-model="text" @focusIn="handleFocusIn" />
data: function() {
return {
text: "text",
handleFocusIn: () => {
this.text = 'focused!';
}
};
}
You can find the full list of component events in each DevExtreme widget API Reference's Events section (for example, TextBox events).
A widget instance is required to call methods. Pass a component key to the $refs
property property to get a component whose instance
field stores the widget instance. The component's key is defined in the component's ref
attribute.
<template>
<div title="Accessing Widget Instance">
<dx-text-box :ref="textBoxRefName"/>
<br/>
<dx-button text="Set focus" @click="setFocus"/>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import { DxButton, DxTextBox } from "devextreme-vue";
const textBoxRefName = "some-ref-name";
export default {
data: function() {
return {
textBoxRefName
};
},
components: {
DxTextBox,
DxButton
},
methods: {
setFocus: function() {
this.textBox.focus();
}
},
computed: {
textBox: function() {
return this.$refs[textBoxRefName].instance;
}
}
};
</script>
You should specify proper values for the components' properties because DevExtreme Vue components use Prop Validation and Type Checks. Otherwise, Vue produces a console warning (if you are using the development build).
We also provide TypeScript declarations for DevExtreme Components. Strict typing allows you to catch many bugs and improve your workflow by adding features like auto-completion and automated refactoring.
This example demonstrates how to use DevExtreme Vue components with TypeScript.
The DevExtreme includes a Data Layer and Utils that can be helpful in different scenarios.
DevExtreme Vue editors support built-in data validation.
<dx-validation-group>
<dx-text-box value="email@mail.com">
<dx-validator :validationRules="validationRules.email" />
</dx-text-box>
<dx-text-box value="password">
<dx-validator :validationRules="validationRules.password" />
</dx-text-box>
<dx-validation-summary />
<dx-button text="Submit" @click="validate"/>
</dx-validation-group>
import { DxButton, DxTextBox, DxValidator, DxValidationGroup, DxValidationSummary } from "devextreme-vue";
export default {
components: {
DxButton,
DxTextBox,
DxValidator,
DxValidationGroup,
DxValidationSummary
},
methods: {
validate(params) {
const result = params.validationGroup.validate();
if (result.isValid) {
// form data is valid
//params.validationGroup.reset();
}
}
},
data: function() {
return {
validationRules: {
email: [
{ type: "required", message: "Email is required." },
{ type: "email", message: "Email is invalid." }
],
password: [
{ type: "required", message: "Password is required." }
]
}};
}
};
DevExtreme Vue Components provide configuration components for the underlying widget's complex nested options.
Use a named import to get a configuration component.
import DxChart, { DxTooltip } from "devextreme-vue/chart";
You can use all data-bind features (such as .sync
modifier) in your nested configuration components.
The following example demonstrates how to configure the dxChart widget's tooltip option:
<dx-chart
:data-source="dataSource"
title="Pizza Shop Complaints">
<dx-tooltip :enabled="showTooltip"/>
</dx-chart>
<dx-button text="Toggle tooltip" @click="toggleTooltip"/>
import DxChart, { DxTooltip } from "devextreme-vue/chart";
import DxButton from "devextreme-vue/button";
import { complaintsData } from './data.js';
export default {
components: {
DxChart,
DxTooltip,
DxButton
},
data() {
return {
dataSource: complaintsData,
showTooltip: false
};
},
methods: {
toggleTooltip() {
this.showTooltip = !this.showTooltip;
}
}
};
You can also use configuration components for complex collection options. The following example demonstrates how to configure the dxDataGrid widget's columns option:
<dx-data-grid :data-source="dataSource">
<dx-column data-field="firstName"/>
<dx-column data-field="lastName" caption="Last Name" :visible.sync="showLastName"/>
</dx-data-grid>
<dx-check-box text="Show the 'Last Name' column" v-model="showLastName"/>
import DxDataGrid, { DxColumn } from "devextreme-vue/data-grid";
import DxCheckBox from "devextreme-vue/check-box";
import { data } from './data.js';
export default {
components: {
DxDataGrid,
DxColumn,
DxCheckBox
},
data() {
return {
dataSource: data,
showLastName: true
};
}
};
Note that configuration components are not provided for options that accept a type that depends on another option's value. For example, the DataGrid's editorOptions, Form's editorOptions, Toolbar's widget options.
DevExtreme Vue components are released as an MIT-licensed (free and open-source) DevExtreme add-on.
See the DevExtreme License for more information.
FAQs
DevExtreme Vue UI and Visualization Components
The npm package devextreme-vue receives a total of 13,496 weekly downloads. As such, devextreme-vue popularity was classified as popular.
We found that devextreme-vue demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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