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Front-End Development Projects with Vue.js

You're reading from   Front-End Development Projects with Vue.js Learn to build scalable web applications and dynamic user interfaces with Vue 2

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838984823
Length 774 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (5):
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Clifford Gurney Clifford Gurney
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Clifford Gurney
Philip Kirkbride Philip Kirkbride
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Philip Kirkbride
Raymond Camden Raymond Camden
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Raymond Camden
Maya Shavin Maya Shavin
Author Profile Icon Maya Shavin
Maya Shavin
Hugo Di Francesco Hugo Di Francesco
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Hugo Di Francesco
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Starting Your First Vue Project 2. Working with Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Vue CLI 4. Nesting Components (Modularity) 5. Global Component Composition 6. Routing 7. Animations and Transitions 8. The State of Vue.js State Management 9. Working with Vuex – State, Getters, Actions, and Mutations 10. Working with Vuex – Fetching Remote Data 11. Working with Vuex – Organizing Larger Stores 12. Unit Testing 13. End-to-End Testing 14. Deploying Your Code to the Web Appendix

Introduction

Component nesting is an approach to composition where the application is built up from smaller units (components). The application can be thought of as components fitting within each other. In this scenario, any shared functionality will be provided through components. Vue.js provides other methods of composition.

Component-based composition can be very verbose and will mean we repeat imports wherever a certain piece of functionality is needed. This does not follow the DRY principle. To avoid this duplication and verbosity, we can globally register mixins, plugins, and components to inject the globally available resources to be used throughout the application. This can reduce friction and frustration at having to type out import MyComponent from ... in every consumer of MyComponent.

Much in the same way, applications can be built from different types of primitives (mixins, plugins, and components). For maximum flexibility, components can be defined in different ways...

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