The components property
Nuxt 2.13+ can scan and auto import your components using @nuxt/components module
@nuxt/components
to buildModules
inside nuxt.config
.-
Type:
Boolean
orArray
-
Default:
false
When set to true
or an options object, Nuxt will include @nuxt/components and auto-import your components wherever you use them within your pages, layouts (and other components).
Configuration
export default {
// This will automatically load components from `~/components`
components: true
}
With components: true
, by default the ~/components
directory will be included.
However you can customize auto-discovery behaviour by providing additional directories to scan:
export default {
components: [
// Equivalent to { path: '~/components' }
'~/components',
{ path: '~/components/other', extensions: ['vue'] }
]
}
path
Each item can be either string or object. A string value is a shortcut for { path }
.
path
- Required
-
Type:
String
Path (absolute or relative) to the directory containing your components.
You can use Nuxt aliases (~
or @
) to refer to directories inside the project or directly use a npm package path (similar to using require
within your project).
extensions
-
Type:
Array<string>
-
Default:
-
Extensions supported by Nuxt builder (
builder.supportedExtensions
) -
Default supported extensions
['vue', 'js']
or['vue', 'js', 'ts', 'tsx']
depending on your environment
-
Extensions supported by Nuxt builder (
Example: Support multi-file component structure
If you prefer to split your SFCs into .js
, .vue
and .css
, you could choose only to scan for .vue
files:
| components
---| componentC
------| componentC.vue
------| componentC.js
------| componentC.scss
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
components: [{ path: '~/components', extensions: ['vue'] }]
}
pattern
-
Type:
string
(glob pattern ) -
Default:
**/*.${extensions.join(',')}
Within the specified path
, only files that match this pattern will be included.
ignore
-
Type:
Array
-
Items:
string
(glob pattern ) -
Default:
[]
Patterns to exclude files within the specified path
.
prefix
-
Type:
String
-
Default:
''
(no prefix)
Prefix all matched components.
The example below adds the awesome-
/Awesome
prefix to the name of components in the awesome/
directory.
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
components: [
'~/components',
{ path: '~/components/awesome/', prefix: 'awesome' }
]
}
| components/
---| awesome/
------| Button.vue
---| Button.vue
<template>
<div>
<AwesomeButton>Click on me 🤘</AwesomeButton>
<button>Click on me</button>
</div>
</template>
pathPrefix
-
Type:
Boolean
-
Default:
true
Prefix component name by its path.
watch
-
Type:
Boolean
-
Default:
true
Watch the specified path
for changes, including file additions and file deletions.
transpile
-
Type:
Boolean
-
Default:
'auto'
Transpile specified path
using build.transpile
. By default ('auto'
) it will set transpile: true
if node_modules/
is in path
.
level
-
Type:
Number
-
Default:
0
Levels are used to define allow overwriting components that have the same name in two different directories. This can be useful for library authors who want to allow users to override their components, or for custom themes.
export default {
components: [
'~/components', // default level is 0
{ path: 'my-theme/components', level: 1 }
]
}
A component in ~/components
will then overwrite one with the same name in my-theme/components
. The lowest value takes priority.
Advanced
Overwriting Components
It is possible to have a way to overwrite components using the level option. This is very useful for modules and theme authors.
Considering this structure:
| node_modules/
---| my-theme/
------| components/
---------| Header.vue
| components/
---| Header.vue
Then defining in the nuxt.config
:
components: [
'~/components', // default level is 0
{ path: 'node_modules/my-theme/components', level: 1 }
]
Our components/Header.vue
will overwrite our theme component since the lowest level takes priority.
Library Authors
Making Vue Component libraries with automatic tree-shaking and component registration is now super easy ✨
This module exposes a hook named components:dirs
so you can easily extend the directory list without requiring user configuration in your Nuxt module.
Imagine a directory structure like this:
| node_modules/
---| awesome-ui/
------| components/
---------| Alert.vue
---------| Button.vue
------| nuxt.js
| pages/
---| index.vue
| nuxt.config.js
Then in awesome-ui/nuxt.js
you can use the components:dir
hook:
import { join } from 'path'
export default function () {
this.nuxt.hook('components:dirs', dirs => {
// Add ./components dir to the list
dirs.push({
path: join(__dirname, 'components'),
prefix: 'awesome'
})
})
}
That's it! Now in your project, you can import your ui library as a Nuxt module in your nuxt.config.js
:
export default {
buildModules: ['@nuxt/components', 'awesome-ui/nuxt']
}
And directly use the module components (prefixed with awesome-
), our pages/index.vue
:
<template>
<div>
My <AwesomeButton>UI button</AwesomeButton>!
<awesome-alert>Here's an alert!</awesome-alert>
</div>
</template>
It will automatically import the components only if used and also support HMR when updating your components in node_modules/awesome-ui/components/
.
Next: publish your awesome-ui
module to npm and share it with the other Nuxters ✨