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Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 - Second Edition

You're reading from  Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234991
Pages 628 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (4):
Maya Shavin Maya Shavin
Profile icon Maya Shavin
Raymond Camden Raymond Camden
Profile icon Raymond Camden
Clifford Gurney Clifford Gurney
Profile icon Clifford Gurney
Hugo Di Francesco Hugo Di Francesco
Profile icon Hugo Di Francesco
View More author details

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction and Crash Course
2. Chapter 1: Starting Your First Vue Project 3. Chapter 2: Working with Data 4. Chapter 3: Vite and Vue Devtools 5. Part 2: Building Your First Vue App
6. Chapter 4: Nesting Components (Modularity) 7. Chapter 5: The Composition API 8. Chapter 6: Global Component Composition 9. Chapter 7: Routing 10. Chapter 8: Animations and Transitions 11. Part 3: Global State Management
12. Chapter 9: The State of Vue State Management 13. Chapter 10: State Management with Pinia 14. Part 4: Testing and Application Deployment
15. Chapter 11: Unit Testing 16. Chapter 12: End-to-End Testing 17. Chapter 13: Deploying Your Code to the Web 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding CSS modules

A recent pattern that has become popular in the reactive framework world is CSS modules. Frontend development always faces the issue of conflicting CSS class names, ill-structured BEM code, and confusing CSS file structures. Vue components help to solve this by being modular and allowing you to compose CSS that will generate unique class names for the specific component at compile time.

Using CSS modules in Vue exports CSS styles from the style section into JavaScript modules and uses those styles in the template and logic computing.

To enable this feature in Vue, you will need to add the module attribute to the style block, and reference as classes using the :class and $style.<class name> syntax, as shown here:

<template>
    <div :class="$style.container">CSS modules</div>
</template>
<style module>
.container {
  width: 100px;
  margin: 0 auto;
  background: green;
}
</style>

Once you have enabled the CSS module, the Vue engine exposes the $style object containing all the defined selectors as objects for use within the template section, and this.$style to use within the component’s JavaScript logic. In the preceding example, you are binding the CSS stylings defined for the.container class selector to div using $style.container.

If you inspected the DOM tree, that class would be called something such as .container_ABC123. If you were to create multiple components that had a semantic class name such as .container but used CSS modules, you would never run into style conflicts again.

Now, let’s practice using CSS modules to style a Vue component.

Exercise 1.12 – styling Vue components using CSS modules

To access the code file for this exercise, refer to https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Frontend-Development-Projects-with-Vue.js-3/tree/v2-edition/Chapter01/Exercise1.12.

Let’s start by performing the following steps:

  1. Use the application generated with npm init vue@3 as a starting point, or within the root folder of the code repository, navigate into the Chapter01/Exercise1.12 folder by using the following commands in order:
    > cd Chapter01/Exercise1.12/
    > yarn
  2. Run the application using the following command:
    yarn dev
  3. Open the exercise project in VS Code (by using the code . command within the project directory) or your preferred IDE.
  4. Create a new Vue component file named Exercise1-12.vue in the src/components directory.
  5. Inside Exercise1-12.vue, compose the following code:
    <template>
      <div>
        <h1>{{ title }}</h1>
        <h2>{{ subtitle }}</h2>
      </div>
    </template>
    <script>
    export default {
      data() {
        return {
          title: 'CSS module component!',
          subtitle: 'The fourth exercise',
        }
      },
    }
    </script>
  6. Add the <style> block and add module as an attribute instead of scoped:
    <style module>
    h1,
    h2 {
      font-family: 'Avenir', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
      text-align: center;
    }
    .title {
      font-family: 'Avenir', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
      color: #2c3e50;
      margin-top: 60px;
    }
    .subtitle {
      color: #4fc08d;
      font-style: italic;
    }
    </style>
  7. To use CSS modules in your template, you need to bind them to your HTML elements by using the :class syntax, which is the same as the v-bind:class directive:
    <h1 :class="$style.title">{{ title }}</h1>
    <h2 :class="$style.subtitle">{{ subtitle }}</h2>

When you save it, your project should look something like this:

Figure 1.48 – Output using CSS modules

Figure 1.48 – Output using CSS modules

  1. If you inspect the virtual DOM, you will see how it has applied unique class names to the bound elements:
Figure 1.49 – Generated CSS module class

Figure 1.49 – Generated CSS module class

In this exercise, we saw how to use CSS modules in your Vue components and how it works differently from CSS scoping.

In combination with file splitting and importing SCSS, using CSS modules is the preferred method for scoping component styling here. This safely ensures that individual component styles and business rules do not risk overriding each other and do not pollute global styling and variables with component-specific styling requirements.

Readability is important. The class name also hints at the component name as opposed to the v-data attribute, which can be good when debugging large projects.

In the next section, you will apply what you have learned in this chapter to build a dynamic shopping list app by combining directives, loops, two-way data, and method declaration for a Vue component together, with scoped CSS styling.

Activity 1.01 – building a dynamic shopping list app using Vue

To access the code file for this activity, refer to https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Frontend-Development-Projects-with-Vue.js-3/tree/v2-edition/Chapter01/Activity1.01

This activity aims to leverage your knowledge thus far about the basic features of an SFC, such as expressions, loops, two-way binding, and event handling.

This application should let users create and delete individual list items and clear the total list in one click.

The following steps will help you complete the activity:

  1. Build an interactive form in one component using an input bound to v-model.
  2. Add one input field to which you can add shopping list items. Allow users to add items by using the Enter key by binding a method to the @keyup.enter event.
  3. Users can expect to clear the list by deleting all the items or removing them one at a time. To facilitate this, you can use a delete method, which can pass the array position as an argument, or simply overwrite the whole shopping list data prop with an empty array, [].

The expected outcome is as follows:

Figure 1.50 – Expected output of Activity 1.01

Figure 1.50 – Expected output of Activity 1.01

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Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 - Second Edition
Published in: Mar 2023 Publisher: Packt ISBN-13: 9781803234991
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