Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
vue3-tabs-component
Advanced tools
The package contains a Vue 3 component to easily display some tabs.
<div>
<tabs :options="{ useUrlFragment: false }" @clicked="tabClicked" @changed="tabChanged" nav-item-class="nav-item">
<tab name="First tab">
This is the content of the first tab
</tab>
<tab name="Second tab">
This is the content of the second tab
</tab>
<tab name="Disabled tab" :is-disabled="true">
This content will be unavailable while :is-disabled prop set to true
</tab>
<tab id="oh-hi-mark" name="Custom fragment">
The fragment that is appended to the url can be customized
</tab>
<tab prefix="<span class='glyphicon glyphicon-star'></span> "
name="Prefix and suffix"
suffix=" <span class='badge'>4</span>">
A prefix and a suffix can be added
</tab>
</tabs>
</div>
When reloading the page the component will automatically display the tab that was previously opened.
The rendered output adheres to the ARIA specification.
The package demo is available at https://tabs-component.jakubpotocky.sk
You can install the package via yarn:
yarn add vue3-tabs-component
or npm:
npm install vue3-tabs-component --save
The most common use case is to register the components globally:
import {createApp} from 'vue'
import {Tabs, Tab} from 'src/vue3-tabs-component';
createApp(App)
.component('tabs', Tabs)
.component('tab', Tab)
.mount('#app')
Alternatively you can do this to register the components:
import Vue from 'vue';
import {Tabs, Tab} from 'src/vue3-tabs-component';
Vue.component('tabs', Tabs);
Vue.component('tab', Tab);
On your page you can now use html like this to render tabs:
<div>
<tabs>
<tab name="First tab">
First tab content
</tab>
<tab name="Second tab">
Second tab content
</tab>
<tab name="Third tab">
Third tab content
</tab>
</tabs>
</div>
By default, it will show the first tab.
If you click on a tab a href
representation of the name will be append to the url. For example clicking on the tab Second tab
will append #second-tab
to the url.
When loading a page with a fragment that matches the href
of a tab, it will open up that tab. For example visiting /#third-tab
will open up the tab with name Third tab
.
By default, the component will remember which was the last open tab for 5 minutes. If you, for instance, click on Third tab
and then visit /
the third tab will be opened.
You can change the cache lifetime by passing the lifetime in minutes in the cache-lifetime
property of the tabs
component.
<tabs cache-lifetime="10">
...
</tabs>
To disable the cache completely, set the cache-lifetime
as 0
.
When using with other libraries that use the url fragment, you can disable modifying the url fragment by passing the useUrlFragment
options. This helps using it with vue-router, or using vue3-tabs-component twice in the same page.
<tabs :options="{ useUrlFragment: false }">
...
</tabs>
When clicking a tab, the default browser scroll behavior gets applied.
By-default, this makes the page jump to the element, which in this case means jumping to the tab content.
This may be undesired - to disable this default behaviour, you can use the options.disableScrollBehavior
prop as true
on a tabs
component:
<tabs :options="{ disableScrollBehavior: true }">
...
</tabs>
Tabs have two events to which you can bind: changed
and clicked
<tabs @clicked="tabClicked" @changed="tabChanged">
...
</tabs>
For example:
export default {
methods: {
tabClicked (selectedTab) {
console.log('Current tab re-clicked:' + selectedTab.tab.name)
},
tabChanged (selectedTab) {
console.log('Tab changed to:' + selectedTab.tab.name)
}
}
}
changed
is emitted when the tab changes and can be used as handle to load data on request.
clicked
is emitted when an active tab is re-clicked and can be used to e.g. reload the data in the current tab.
You can add a suffix and a prefix to the tab by using the suffix
and prefix
attributes, which can contain HTML.
<tab prefix="my prefix - " name="First tab" suffix=" - my suffix">
First tab content
</tab>
The title of the tab will now be my prefix - First tab - my suffix
.
The fragment that's added to the url when clicking the tab will only be based on the name
of a tab, the name-prefix
and name-suffix
attributes will be ignored.
When clicking on a tab it's name will be used as a fragment in the url. For example clicking on the Second tab
will append #second-tab
to the current url.
You can customize that fragment by using the id
attribute.
<div>
<tabs>
<tab id="custom-fragment" name="My tab">
First tab content
</tab>
</tabs>
</div>
Clicking on My tab
will then append #custom-fragment
to the url.
When disabling the cache, it can be useful to specify a default tab to load which is not the first one. You can select this by passing the defaultTabHash
option.
<tabs :options="{ defaultTabHash: 'second-tab' }">
<tab id="first-tab" name="First tab">
First tab content
</tab>
<tab id="second-tab" name="Default tab">
Second tab content
</tab>
</tabs>
If you would like to change an active tab of a Tabs component programatically you can do so by referencing the tabs component and then calling the selectTab
method on the reference's value with the appropriate tab hash.
E.g. clicking the "Change tab" button would change set #first-tab
as active on the tabs instance referenced as testTabs
:
<template>
<tabs ref="testTabs" :options="{ defaultTabHash: 'second-tab' }">
<tab id="first-tab" name="First tab">
First tab content
</tab>
<tab id="second-tab" name="Default tab">
Second tab content
</tab>
</tabs>
<button @click="changeTab">Change tab</button>
</template>
<script setup>
import { ref } from 'vue'
const testTabs = ref(null)
const changeTab = () => {
testTabs.value.selectTab('#first-tab')
}
</script>
Each node can be styled by specifying classes.
The output HTML classes can be overridden by using the following Tabs
component attributes:
wrapper-class
panels-wrapper-class
nav-class
nav-item-class
nav-item-active-class
nav-item-inactive-class
nav-item-disabled-class
nav-item-link-class
nav-item-link-active-class
nav-item-link-inactive-class
nav-item-link-disabled-class
The Tab
content (section) class can be overridden with the panel-class
attribute
If no custom classes are set, the following classes are used as default:
<div class="tabs-component"> // wrapper-class
<ul class="tabs-component-tabs"> // nav-class
<li class="tabs-component-tab is-disabled"> // nav-item-class + nav-item-disabled-class
<a class="tabs-component-tab-a is-disabled">…</a> // nav-item-link-class + nav-item-link-disabled-class
</li>
<li class="tabs-component-tab is-active"> // nav-item-class + nav-item-active-class
<a class="tabs-component-tab-a is-active">…</a> // nav-item-link-class + nav-item-link-active-class
</li>
<li class="tabs-component-tab is-inactive"> // nav-item-class + nav-item-inactive-class
<a class="tabs-component-tab-a is-inactive">…</a> // nav-item-link-class + nav-item-link-inactive-class
</li>
</ul>
<div class="tabs-component-panels"> // panels-wrapper-class
<section class="tabs-component-panel"> // Tab > panel-class
…
</section>
</div>
</div>
If you discover any security related issues, please contact Jakub Potocký instead of using the issue tracker.
This package is a fork of the popular spatie/vue-tabs-component
Vue 2 package, which has been discontinued by Spatie
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
1.3.2 - 2023-04-08
package.json
FAQs
A Vue component to easily render tabs
The npm package vue3-tabs-component receives a total of 4,072 weekly downloads. As such, vue3-tabs-component popularity was classified as popular.
We found that vue3-tabs-component demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.