On-demand components auto importing for Vue.
- π Supports both Vue 2 and Vue 3 out-of-the-box.
- β¨ Supports both components and directives.
- β‘οΈ Supports Vite, Webpack, Vue CLI, Rollup, esbuild and more, powered by unplugin.
- π Tree-shakable, only registers the components you use.
- πͺ Folder names as namespaces.
- π¦Ύ Full TypeScript support.
- π Built-in resolvers for popular UI libraries.
- π Works perfectly with unplugin-icons.
npm i unplugin-vue-components -D
vite-plugin-components
has been renamed tounplugin-vue-components
, see the migration guide.
Vite
// vite.config.ts
import Components from 'unplugin-vue-components/vite'
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [
Components({ /* options */ }),
],
})
Rollup
// rollup.config.js
import Components from 'unplugin-vue-components/rollup'
export default {
plugins: [
Components({ /* options */ }),
],
}
Webpack
// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
/* ... */
plugins: [
require('unplugin-vue-components/webpack')({ /* options */ }),
],
}
Vue CLI
// vue.config.js
module.exports = {
configureWebpack: {
plugins: [
require('unplugin-vue-components/webpack')({ /* options */ }),
],
},
}
esbuild
// esbuild.config.js
import { build } from 'esbuild'
build({
/* ... */
plugins: [
require('unplugin-vue-components/esbuild')({
/* options */
}),
],
})
Use components in templates as you would usually do, it will import components on demand, and there is no import
and component registration
required anymore! If you register the parent component asynchronously (or lazy route), the auto-imported components will be code-split along with their parent.
It will automatically turn this
<template>
<div>
<HelloWorld msg="Hello Vue 3.0 + Vite" />
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'App'
}
</script>
into this
<template>
<div>
<HelloWorld msg="Hello Vue 3.0 + Vite" />
</div>
</template>
<script>
import HelloWorld from './src/components/HelloWorld.vue'
export default {
name: 'App',
components: {
HelloWorld
}
}
</script>
To get TypeScript support for auto-imported components, there is a PR to Vue 3 extending the interface of global components. Currently, Volar has supported this usage already. If you are using Volar, you can change the config as following to get the support.
Components({
dts: true, // enabled by default if `typescript` is installed
})
Once the setup is done, a components.d.ts
will be generated and updates automatically with the type definitions. Feel free to commit it into git or not as you want.
Make sure you also add components.d.ts
to your tsconfig.json
under includes
.
We have several built-in resolvers for popular UI libraries like Vuetify, Ant Design Vue, and Element Plus, where you can enable them by:
Supported Resolvers:
- Ant Design Vue
- Arco Design Vue
- Element Plus
- Element UI
- Headless UI
- IDux
- Inkline
- Naive UI
- Prime Vue
- Vant
- VEUI
- Varlet UI
- View UI
- Vuetify
- VueUse Components
- Quasar
- TDesign
// vite.config.js
import Components from 'unplugin-vue-components/vite'
import {
AntDesignVueResolver,
ElementPlusResolver,
VantResolver,
} from 'unplugin-vue-components/resolvers'
// your plugin installation
Components({
resolvers: [
AntDesignVueResolver(),
ElementPlusResolver(),
VantResolver(),
],
})
You can also write your own resolver quickly:
Components({
resolvers: [
// example of importing Vant
(componentName) => {
// where `componentName` is always CapitalCase
if (componentName.startsWith('Van'))
return { name: componentName.slice(3), from: 'vant' }
},
],
})
If you successfully configured other UI libraries, please feel free to contribute and help others using them out-of-box. Thanks!
Some libraries might register some global components for you to use anywhere (e.g. Vue Router provides <RouterLink>
and <RouterView>
). Since they are global available, there is no need for this plugin to import them. However, those are commonly not TypeScript friendly, and you might need to register their types manually.
Thus unplugin-vue-components
provided a way to only register types for global components.
Components({
dts: true,
types: [{
from: 'vue-router',
names: ['RouterLink', 'RouterView'],
}],
})
So the RouterLink
and RouterView
will be presented in components.d.ts
.
By default, unplugin-vue-components
detects supported libraries automatically (e.g. vue-router
) when their are installed in the workspace. If you want to disable it completely, you can pass an empty array to it:
Components({
// Disable type only registration
types: [],
})
package.json
{
"devDependencies": {
- "vite-plugin-components": "*",
+ "unplugin-vue-components": "^0.14.0",
}
}
vite.config.json
- import Components, { ElementPlusResolver } from 'vite-plugin-components'
+ import Components from 'unplugin-vue-components/vite'
+ import { ElementPlusResolver } from 'unplugin-vue-components/resolvers'
export default {
plugins: [
/* ... */
Components({
/* ... */
// `customComponentsResolvers` has renamed to `resolver`
- customComponentsResolvers: [
+ resolvers: [
ElementPlusResolver(),
],
// `globalComponentsDeclaration` has renamed to `dts`
- globalComponentsDeclaration: true,
+ dts: true,
// `customLoaderMatcher` is depreacted, use `include` instead
- customLoaderMatcher: id => id.endsWith('.md'),
+ include: [/\.vue$/, /\.vue\?vue/, /\.md$/],
}),
],
}
The following show the default values of the configuration
Components({
// relative paths to the directory to search for components.
dirs: ['src/components'],
// valid file extensions for components.
extensions: ['vue'],
// search for subdirectories
deep: true,
// resolvers for custom components
resolvers: [],
// generate `components.d.ts` global declarations,
// also accepts a path for custom filename
// default: `true` if package typescript is installed
dts: false,
// Allow subdirectories as namespace prefix for components.
directoryAsNamespace: false,
// Subdirectory paths for ignoring namespace prefixes
// works when `directoryAsNamespace: true`
globalNamespaces: [],
// auto import for directives
// default: `true` for Vue 3, `false` for Vue 2
// Babel is needed to do the transformation for Vue 2, it's disabled by default for performance concerns.
// To install Babel, run: `npm install -D @babel/parser @babel/traverse`
directives: true,
// filters for transforming targets
include: [/\.vue$/, /\.vue\?vue/],
exclude: [/[\\/]node_modules[\\/]/, /[\\/]\.git[\\/]/, /[\\/]\.nuxt[\\/]/],
})
See the Vitesse starter template.
Thanks to @brattonross, this project is heavily inspired by vite-plugin-voie.
MIT License Β© 2020-PRESENT Anthony Fu