What is vue-template-compiler?
The vue-template-compiler package is used to pre-compile Vue.js templates into render functions to achieve faster render times and smaller bundle sizes. It is typically used in build processes with tools like Webpack or Browserify.
What are vue-template-compiler's main functionalities?
Compile template strings
This feature allows you to compile Vue.js template strings into render functions. The `compile` function returns an object containing the render function as a string, which can be used to render Vue components.
const { compile } = require('vue-template-compiler');
const compiled = compile('<div>{{ message }}</div>');
console.log(compiled.render);
Compile template files
This feature is used to parse `.vue` single-file components and extract their template content. The `parseComponent` function returns an object with the template, script, and style parts of the component.
const { parseComponent } = require('vue-template-compiler');
const fs = require('fs');
const source = fs.readFileSync('MyComponent.vue', 'utf-8');
const parsed = parseComponent(source);
console.log(parsed.template.content);
Other packages similar to vue-template-compiler
babel-plugin-transform-vue-jsx
This package is a Babel plugin that allows you to use JSX with Vue.js components. It provides an alternative to using the Vue template syntax and offers a different developer experience compared to vue-template-compiler.
vue-loader
Vue-loader is a Webpack loader that allows you to write Vue components in a format called Single-File Components (SFCs). It uses vue-template-compiler under the hood to compile templates but provides additional functionalities like hot-reloading and CSS extraction.
preact
Preact is a fast 3kB alternative to React with the same modern API. While not directly similar to vue-template-compiler, it serves a similar purpose for the Preact ecosystem, allowing developers to compile JSX into render functions.
vue-template-compiler
This package is auto-generated. For pull requests please see src/entries/web-compiler.js.
This package can be used to pre-compile Vue 2.0 templates into render functions to avoid runtime-compilation overhead and CSP restrictions. You will only need it if you are writing build tools with very specific needs. In most cases you should be using vue-loader or vueify instead, both of which use this package internally.
Installation
npm install vue-template-compiler
const compiler = require('vue-template-compiler')
API
compiler.compile(template, [options])
Compiles a template string and returns compiled JavaScript code. The returned result is an object of the following format:
{
render: string,
staticRenderFns: Array<string>,
errors: Array<string>
}
Note the returned function code uses with
and thus cannot be used in strict mode code.
Options
It's possible to hook into the compilation process to support custom template features. However, beware that by injecting custom compile-time modules, your templates will not work with other build tools built on standard built-in modules, e.g vue-loader
and vueify
.
The optional options
object can contain the following:
-
modules
An array of compiler modules. For details on compiler modules, refer to its type definition and the built-in modules.
-
directives
An object where the key is the directive name and the value is a function that transforms an template AST node. For example:
compiler.compile('<div v-test></div>', {
directives: {
test (node, directiveMeta) {
}
})
By default, a compile-time directive will extract the directive and the directive will not be present at runtime. If you want the directive to also be handled by a runtime definition, return true
in the transform function.
Refer to the implementation of some built-in compile-time directives.
compiler.compileToFunctions(template)
Similar to compiler.compile
, but directly returns instantiated functions:
{
render: Function,
staticRenderFns: Array<Function>
}
This is only useful at runtime with pre-configured builds, so it doesn't accept any compile-time options. In addition, this method uses new Function()
so it is not CSP-compliant.
compiler.parseComponent(file, [options])
Parse a SFC (single-file component, or *.vue
file) into a descriptor. This is used in SFC build tools like vue-loader
and vueify
.
Options
pad
: with { pad: true }
, the extracted content for each block will be padded with newlines to ensure that the line numbers align with the original file. This is useful when you are piping the extracted content into other pre-processors, as you will get correct line numbers if there are any syntax errors.