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vue-c2c

v0.2.1

Published

Transforming Vue components to composable functions

Downloads

48

Readme

When should I use this?

In certain use cases (e.g. confirm, dialog, toast), composable functions can provide greater flexibility and ease of use than components.

Install

npm i vue-c2c

Usage

c2c

Options

interface VueC2COptions {
  /**
   * Display style of the component.
   * @default 'v-if'
   */
  display?: 'v-if' | 'v-show'
  /**
   * Visible of the component.
   * @default false
   */
  visible?: boolean
  /**
   * Return a placeholder component that allows specifying the insertion position.
   * @default false
   */
  withPlaceholder?: T
  /**
   * Function that returns an HTMLElement where the component should be appended to.
   * Only applies if `withPlaceholder` option is false.
   * @default ()=> document.body
   */
  appendTo?: () => HTMLElement
}
<script setup>
  import { c2c } from 'vue-c2c'
  import Dialog from './Dialog.vue'

  const useDialog = c2c(Dialog, VueC2COptions)

  const { visible, show, hide, toggle, exposed } = useDialog(props, {
    emits: {
      onOk: () => {},
      onCancel: () => {},
    } 
  })
</script>

Example

withPlaceholder Option

withPlaceholder option provides two additional features:

  • Element placeholder:

    The element placeholder functionality allows us to specify the location of created elements in a more flexible manner.

  • Friendly SSR support:

    If you're working on an SSR project (e.g. Nuxt), use withPlaceholder option for better SSR support.

<script setup>
  import { c2c } from 'vue-c2c'
  import Dialog from './Dialog.vue'

  const useDialog = c2c(Dialog, {
    withPlaceholder: true,
  })

  const { Placeholder, visible, show, hide, toggle, exposed } = useDialog(props, {
    emits: {
      onOk: () => {},
      onCancel: () => {},
    } 
  })
</script>

<template>
  <Placeholder>
    Hello World
  </Placeholder>
</template>

Example

License

MIT License © 2023