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Vue.js: Understanding its Tools and Ecosystem

You're reading from   Vue.js: Understanding its Tools and Ecosystem Take a crash course in the main concepts and syntax of the Vue.js library

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781800206625
Length 194 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Dave Berning Dave Berning
Author Profile Icon Dave Berning
Dave Berning
Backstop Media LLC Backstop Media LLC
Author Profile Icon Backstop Media LLC
Backstop Media LLC
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Getting Started with Vue.js FREE CHAPTER 2. Scaffolding Projects With Vue CLI 3 3. Navigation with Vue Router 4. State Management with Vuex 5. Debugging With Vue DevTools 6. Server-Side Rendering with Nuxt.js 7. Static Site Generation with VuePress 8. Mobile App Development with NativeScript for Vue.js 9. Greater Control of JavaScript and Type Casting with TypeScript 10. The Future of Vue.js and Adoption Rates

Routing to Another Route

In a previous section, you linked another route via plan ES6 JavaScript with the <router-link /> component. The <router-link /> component accepts a single prop: to. The to prop is equivalent to href with the <a> HTML tag. In fact, <router-link /> actually gets rendered as an anchor tag with a href attribute.

Routing Using String Paths

The easiest way to link to another route is to pass in a string to the to prop. The string directory corresponds to the path property in the route object in the router.js

<router-link to="/about">To the About Page</router-link>

The router-link above renders out to a <a> tag:

<a href="/about">To the About Page</a>

Routing Using Names and Parameters

Sometimes it’s easier to remember a name of a route versus the string URL path. You can link to another route by using the name property in the route object.

router.js

import Vue from 'vue&apos...
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