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VueLayout

VueLayout is a simple yet dynamic way to handle your layouts inside a Vue application. This library is inspired by how Inertia manages their persistent layouts, which I think should be adopted more in practice! You will benefit from less boilerplate code & advanced nested layouts with minimal setup. Let's have a look!

***Supports only Vue 3. Vue 2 adaptation soon

vuejs vite

Prerequisite

# Peer dependency
vue-router

VueLayout leverages on vue-router as a way to manage the switching of layouts. If your project does not use vue-router, I am sorry, but this library will not be useful to you.

Installation

Use any of the NPM package manager

# NPM
npm install @irfanismail/vue-layout --save-dev

# Yarn
yarn add @irfanismail/vue-layout -D

Usage

Requirements

  1. All layout component must have (1) default slot!
  2. Use vue-router as routing tool

Setup

  1. Inside your App.vue or your main Vue instance. Choose ONE of the option:
  • Component: <layout-vue>
  • Composable: useLayout(router)

Option 1: Component

<template>
    <layout-vue></layout-vue>
</template>

// Options API
<script>
import LayoutVue from '@irfanismail/vue-layout'

export default {
    components: {
        LayoutVue
    }
}
</script>


// Composition API
<script setup>
import LayoutVue from '@irfanismail/vue-layout'
</script>

Option 2: Composable

<template>
    <component :is="layout">
        <router-view />
    </component>
</template>

// Options / Composition API
<script>
import { useLayout } from '@irfanismail/vue-layout'
import { useRoute } from 'vue-router'

export default {
    setup() {
        const { layout } = useLayout(useRoute())
        return { layout }
    }
}
</script>
  1. Create your layouts! Below are some examples:
// layouts/authenticated.vue
<template>
    <div>
        <navbar></navbar>
        <slot />
    </div>
</template>


// layouts/header-main-footer.vue
<template>
    <div>
        <header></header>
        <main><slot /></main>
        <footer></footer>
    </div>
</template>
  1. Go to your vue-router setup file. Inside your routes list, append meta.layout to the relevant pages and list the layouts for the page in an array! Eg.
// Example vue-router setup
import { createRouter, createWebHistory } from 'vue-router'

/* Pages */
import Home from '../pages/home.vue'
import Login from '../pages/login.vue'

/* Layouts */
import Authenticated from '../layouts/authenticated.vue'
import HeaderMainFooter from '../layouts/header-main-footer.vue'
import Guest from '../layouts/guest.vue'

/* Routes */
const routes = [
    {
        path: '/',
        component: Home,
        name: 'home:index',
        meta: {
            layout: [Authenticated, HeaderMainFooter]
        }
    },
    {
        path: '/login',
        component: Login,
        name: 'auth:login:index',
        meta: {
            layout: [Guest]
        }
    }
]

const router = createRouter({
    history: createWebHistory(),
    routes: routes
})

export default router
  1. That's it! Your setup is done! Go & give a try

Comparison to Traditional Way of Handling Layouts

You might have encountered the following code where we essentially wrap the entire page with the layout component(s):

// home.vue
<template>
    <base-layout>
        ...
    </base-layout>
</template>

<script setup>
import BaseLayout from '@/layouts/BaseLayout.vue'
</script>


// about.vue
<template>
    <base-layout>
         <team-layout>
            ...
         </team-layout>
    </base-layout>
</template>

<script setup>
import BaseLayout from '@/layouts/BaseLayout.vue'
import TeamLayout from '@/layouts/TeamLayout.vue'
</script>
  • If we have lots of pages, we are bound to repeat this code pattern over and over again, which sucks! By using vue-layout, we get rid of this repeating code and let the router handle the layouts for us.

  • Layout nesting is done by listing the layouts in an [array] starting from the outer layer to the inner layer. The page content will be rendered inside the last layout in the array!

Limitations

  • You cannot directly pass props to your layout components. To mitigate this, you can use state management tool such as Vuex or Pinia to manage the state of your layout components.

  • Does not handle custom layout slots.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.

License

MIT

Author

irfanismail

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VueLayout is a simple yet dynamic way to handle your layouts inside a Vue application.

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