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Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5

You're reading from   Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5 Bring the frontend and backend together with Vue, Vuex, and Laravel

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299589
Length 376 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Anthony Gore Anthony Gore
Author Profile Icon Anthony Gore
Anthony Gore
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello Vue – An Introduction to Vue.js FREE CHAPTER 2. Prototyping Vuebnb, Your First Vue.js Project 3. Setting Up a Laravel Development Environment 4. Building a Web Service with Laravel 5. Integrating Laravel and Vue.js with Webpack 6. Composing Widgets with Vue.js Components 7. Building a Multi-Page App with Vue Router 8. Managing Your Application State with Vuex 9. Adding a User Login and API Authentication with Passport 10. Deploying a Full-Stack App to the Cloud

Webpack


Webpack is the default build tool supplied with Laravel 5.5 and we'll be making use of it in the development of Vuebnb.

What makes Webpack different to other popular build tools, such as Gulp and Grunt, is that it's first and foremost a module bundler. Let's begin our overview of Webpack by getting an understanding of how the module bundling process works.

Dependencies

In a frontend application, we are likely to have dependencies for third-party JavaScript libraries or even other files in our own code base. For example, the Vuebnb prototype is dependent on Vue.js and the mock-listing data file:

Figure 5.3. Vuebnb prototype dependencies

There's no real way of managing these dependencies in a browser, other than to ensure any shared functions and variables have global scope and that scripts are loaded in the right order.

For example, since node_modules/vue/dist/vue.js defines a global Vue object and is loaded first, we're able to use the Vue object in our app.js script. If either of those...

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