This repo is deprecated, it was created in the days before Vue shipped with TypeScript out of the box. Now the best path to get started is through the official CLI. We'll keep this repo around as a useful archive.
This quick start guide will teach you how to get TypeScript and Vue working together. This guide is flexible enough that any steps here can be used to integrate TypeScript into an existing Vue project.
If you're new to Typescript and Vue, here are few resources to get you up and running:
Let's create a new package.
mkdir typescript-vue-tutorial
cd typescript-vue-tutorial
Next, we'll scaffold our project in the following way:
typescript-vue-tutorial/
├─ dist/
└─ src/
└─ components/
TypeScript files will start out in your src
folder, run through the TypeScript compiler, then webpack, and end up in a bundle.js
file in dist
.
Any components that we write will go in the src/components
folder.
Let's scaffold this out:
mkdir src
cd src
mkdir components
cd ..
Webpack will eventually generate the dist
directory for us.
Now we'll turn this folder into an npm package.
npm init
You'll be given a series of prompts.
You can use the defaults except for your entry point.
You can always go back and change these in the package.json
file that's been generated for you.
Ensure TypeScript, Webpack, Vue and the necessary loaders are installed.
npm install --save-dev typescript webpack webpack-cli ts-loader css-loader vue vue-loader vue-template-compiler
Webpack is a tool that will bundle your code and optionally all of its dependencies into a single .js
file.
While you don't need to use a bundler like Webpack or Browserify, these tools will allow us to use .vue
files which we'll cover in a bit.
We didn't need to add .d.ts
files, but if we were using a package which didn't ship declaration files, we'd need to install the appropriate @types/
package.
Read more about using definition files in our documentation.
You'll want to bring your TypeScript files together - both the code you'll be writing as well as any necessary declaration files.
To do this, you'll need to create a tsconfig.json
which contains a list of your input files as well as all your compilation settings.
Simply create a new file in your project root named tsconfig.json
and fill it with the following contents:
You can easily create tsconfig.json
this command.
tsc --init
{
"compilerOptions": {
"outDir": "./built/",
"sourceMap": true,
"strict": true,
"noImplicitReturns": true,
"module": "es2015",
"moduleResolution": "node",
"target": "es5"
},
"include": [
"./src/**/*"
]
}
Notice the strict
flag is set to true.
At the very least, TypeScript's noImplicitThis
flag will need to be turned on to leverage Vue's declaration files, but strict
gives us that and more (like noImplicitAny
and strictNullChecks
).
We strongly recommend using TypeScript's stricter options for a better experience.
We'll need to add a webpack.config.js
to bundle our app.
var path = require('path')
var webpack = require('webpack')
const VueLoaderPlugin = require('vue-loader/lib/plugin')
module.exports = {
entry: './src/index.ts',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './dist'),
publicPath: '/dist/',
filename: 'build.js'
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.vue$/,
loader: 'vue-loader',
options: {
loaders: {
// Since sass-loader (weirdly) has SCSS as its default parse mode, we map
// the "scss" and "sass" values for the lang attribute to the right configs here.
// other preprocessors should work out of the box, no loader config like this necessary.
'scss': 'vue-style-loader!css-loader!sass-loader',
'sass': 'vue-style-loader!css-loader!sass-loader?indentedSyntax',
}
// other vue-loader options go here
}
},
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
exclude: /node_modules/,
options: {
appendTsSuffixTo: [/\.vue$/],
}
},
{
test: /\.(png|jpg|gif|svg)$/,
loader: 'file-loader',
options: {
name: '[name].[ext]?[hash]'
}
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [
'vue-style-loader',
'css-loader'
]
}
]
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['.ts', '.js', '.vue', '.json'],
alias: {
'vue$': 'vue/dist/vue.esm.js'
}
},
devServer: {
historyApiFallback: true,
noInfo: true
},
performance: {
hints: false
},
devtool: '#eval-source-map',
plugins: [
// make sure to include the plugin for the magic
new VueLoaderPlugin()
]
}
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') {
module.exports.devtool = '#source-map'
// http://vue-loader.vuejs.org/en/workflow/production.html
module.exports.plugins = (module.exports.plugins || []).concat([
new webpack.DefinePlugin({
'process.env': {
NODE_ENV: '"production"'
}
}),
new webpack.optimize.UglifyJsPlugin({
sourceMap: true,
compress: {
warnings: false
}
}),
new webpack.LoaderOptionsPlugin({
minimize: true
})
])
}
Open up your package.json
and add a script named build
to run Webpack.
Your "scripts"
field should look something like this:
"scripts": {
"build": "webpack",
"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1"
},
Once we add an entry point, we'll be able to build by running
npm run build
and have builds get triggered on changes by running
npm run build -- --watch
Let's create the most bare-bones Vue & TypeScript example that we can try out.
First, create the file ./src/index.ts
:
// src/index.ts
import Vue from "vue";
let v = new Vue({
el: "#app",
template: `
<div>
<div>Hello {{name}}!</div>
Name: <input v-model="name" type="text">
</div>`,
data: {
name: "World"
}
});
Let's check to see if everything is wired up correctly.
Create an index.html
with the following content at your root:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<div id="app"></div>
</body>
<script src="./dist/build.js"></script>
</html>
Now run npm run build
and open up your index.html
file in a browser.
You should see some text that says Hello World!
.
Below that, you'll see a textbox.
If you change the content of the textbox, you'll notice how the text is synchronized between the two.
Congrats! You've gotten TypeScript and Vue fully hooked up!
As you've just seen, Vue has a very simple interface for when you need to accomplish simple tasks. When our page only needed to communicate a bit of data between two elements, it took very little code.
For more complex tasks, Vue is flexible in that it supports breaking your application into components. Components are useful for separating the concerns of how entities are displayed to the user. Read up more on components from Vue's documentation.
A Vue component can be declared in the following manner:
// src/components/Hello.ts
import Vue from "vue";
export default Vue.extend({
template: `
<div>
<div>Hello {{name}}{{exclamationMarks}}</div>
<button @click="decrement">-</button>
<button @click="increment">+</button>
</div>
`,
props: ['name', 'initialEnthusiasm'],
data() {
return {
enthusiasm: this.initialEnthusiasm,
}
},
methods: {
increment() { this.enthusiasm++; },
decrement() {
if (this.enthusiasm > 1) {
this.enthusiasm--;
}
},
},
computed: {
exclamationMarks(): string {
return Array(this.enthusiasm + 1).join('!');
}
}
});
This component has two buttons and some text.
When rendered, it takes an initial name
and an initialEnthusiasm
which is the number of exclamation marks we want to display.
When we hit the +
button, it adds an exclamation mark to the end of the text.
Likewise, when we hit the -
button, it removes an exclamation mark unless we're down to just one.
Our root Vue instance can consume it as follows:
// src/index.ts
import Vue from "vue";
import HelloComponent from "./components/Hello";
let v = new Vue({
el: "#app",
template: `
<div>
Name: <input v-model="name" type="text">
<hello-component :name="name" :initialEnthusiasm="5" />
</div>
`,
data: { name: "World" },
components: {
HelloComponent
}
});
However, we'll note that it is fairly popular to use Vue's single file components. Let's try writing the above as an SFC.
When using Webpack or Browserify, Vue has plugins like vue-loader and vueify which allow you to author your components in HTML-like files.
These files, which end in a .vue
extension, are single file components.
There are a few things that need to be put in place to use .vue
files with TypeScript, but luckily we're already halfway there.
We already installed vue-loader earlier when we got our dev dependencies.
We also specified the appendTsSuffixTo: [/\.vue$/],
option to ts-loader in our webpack.config.js
file, which allows TypeScript to process the code extracted from a single file component.
One extra thing we'll have to do is tell TypeScript what .vue
files will look like when they're imported.
We'll do this with a vue-shims.d.ts
file:
// src/vue-shims.d.ts
declare module "*.vue" {
import Vue from "vue";
export default Vue;
}
We don't need to import this file anywhere.
It's automatically included by TypeScript, and it tells it that anything imported that ends in .vue
has the same shape of the Vue constructor itself.
What's left?
The editing experience!
One of the best features TypeScript gives us is its editor support.
To leverage that within .vue
files, we recommend using Visual Studio Code with the Vetur plugin for Vue.
Now, let's write an SFC!
<!-- src/components/Hello.vue -->
<template>
<div>
<div class="greeting">Hello {{name}}{{exclamationMarks}}</div>
<button @click="decrement">-</button>
<button @click="increment">+</button>
</div>
</template>
<script lang="ts">
import Vue from "vue";
export default Vue.extend({
props: ['name', 'initialEnthusiasm'],
data() {
return {
enthusiasm: this.initialEnthusiasm,
}
},
methods: {
increment() { this.enthusiasm++; },
decrement() {
if (this.enthusiasm > 1) {
this.enthusiasm--;
}
},
},
computed: {
exclamationMarks(): string {
return Array(this.enthusiasm + 1).join('!');
}
}
});
</script>
<style>
.greeting {
font-size: 20px;
}
</style>
and let's import it for our root instance:
// src/index.ts
import Vue from "vue";
import HelloComponent from "./components/Hello.vue";
let v = new Vue({
el: "#app",
template: `
<div>
Name: <input v-model="name" type="text">
<hello-component :name="name" :initialEnthusiasm="5" />
</div>
`,
data: { name: "World" },
components: {
HelloComponent
}
});
Notice a few things about our single-file component:
- We had to write
<script lang="ts">
to get it working with TypeScript. - We had to import the component with the
.vue
extension inindex.ts
. - We were able to write CSS isolated to our components in a
<style>
tag, which we couldn't do in our.ts
components. - We default-exported a call to
Vue.extend
(rather than the options bag itself). If you don't writeVue.extend
, Vetur will make it look like things are working correctly, but you'll get an error when you build your project.
Try running npm run build
and open up index.html
to see the result!
Components can also be defined using decorators. With the help of two additional packages, (vue-class-component and vue-property-decorator), our components can be rewritten in the following manner:
import { Vue, Component, Prop } from "vue-property-decorator";
@Component
export default class HelloDecorator extends Vue {
@Prop() name!: string;
@Prop() initialEnthusiasm!: number;
enthusiasm = this.initialEnthusiasm;
increment() {
this.enthusiasm++;
}
decrement() {
if (this.enthusiasm > 1) {
this.enthusiasm--;
}
}
get exclamationMarks(): string {
return Array(this.enthusiasm + 1).join('!');
}
}
Instead of using Vue.extend
to define our component, we create a class extending Vue
and decorate it using the @Component
decorator from the vue-class-component
package (which was re-exported from the vue-property-decorator
package).
Properties are defined by prefixing instance variables with the @Prop()
decorator from the vue-property-decorator
package.
Because the --strictPropertyInitialization
option is on, we need to tell TypeScript that Vue will initialize our properties by appending a !
to them.
This tells TypeScript "hey, relax, someone else is going to assign this property a value."
Regular instance variables, such as enthusiasm
in our example, are automatically made available for data binding to the template, just as if they had been defined in the data
field.
Note that all variables must be set to a value other than undefined
for the binding to work.
Similarly, methods such as increment
are treated as if they had been written in the methods
field, and are automatically made available for the template.
Finally, computed properties like exclamationMarks
are simply written as get
accessors.
You can try out this application by cloning it from GitHub.
Once you feel like you've got a handle on that, you can try out a sample TodoMVC-style app written in TypeScript and Vue. This TodoMVC-style sample features routing through vue-router so that your application can show different views depending on the current URL.
You may also want to look into Vuex if you're looking for Redux-style state management.