NPM
npm install vue-ls --save
Yarn
yarn add vue-ls
Bower
bower install vue-ls --save
Development Setup
npm install
npm run build
Usage
Vue localStorage API.
import VueLocalStorage from 'vue-ls';
options = {
namespace: 'vuejs__'
};
Vue.use(VueLocalStorage, options);
new Vue({
el: '#app',
mounted: function() {
Vue.ls.set('foo', 'boo');
Vue.ls.set('foo', 'boo', 60 * 60 * 1000);
Vue.ls.get('foo');
Vue.ls.get('boo', 10);
let callback = (val, oldVal, uri) => {
console.log('localStorage change', val);
}
Vue.ls.on('foo', callback)
Vue.ls.off('foo', callback)
Vue.ls.remove('foo');
}
});
Global
Context
API
Vue.ls.get(name, def)
Returns value under name
in local storage. Internally parses the value from JSON before returning it.
def
: default null, returned if not set name
.
Vue.ls.set(name, value, expire)
Persists value
under name
in local storage. Internally converts the value
to JSON.
expire
: default null, life time in milliseconds name
Vue.ls.remove(name)
Removes name
from local storage. Returns true
if the property was successfully deleted, and false
otherwise.
Vue.ls.clear()
Clears local storage.
Vue.ls.on(name, callback)
Listen for changes persisted against name
on other tabs. Triggers callback
when a change occurs, passing the following arguments.
newValue
: the current value for name
in local storage, parsed from the persisted JSONoldValue
: the old value for name
in local storage, parsed from the persisted JSONurl
: the url for the tab where the modification came from
Vue.ls.off(name, callback)
Removes a listener previously attached with Vue.ls.on(name, callback)
.
Testing
npm run test
- run unit testnpm run test:browserstack
- run browser test
npm run test:browserstack:chrome
npm run test:browserstack:ie
npm run test:browserstack:edge
npm run test:browserstack:firefox
npm run test:browserstack:safari
npm run test:chrome
- run browser test in chromenpm run test:phantomjs
- run browser test in phantomjs
Testing Supported By
Note
Some browsers don't support the storage event, and most of the browsers that do support it will only call it when the storage is changed by a different window. So, open your page up in two windows. Click the links in one window and you will probably see the event in the other.
The assumption is that your page will already know all interactions with localStorage in its own window and only needs notification when a different window changes things. This, of course, is a foolish assumption. But.
License