The components/
directory is where you put all your Vue components which can then be imported inside your pages or other components (learn more).
Nuxt automatically imports any components in your components/
directory (along with components that are registered by any modules you may be using).
| components/--| TheHeader.vue--| TheFooter.vue
<template> <div> <TheHeader /> <slot /> <TheFooter /> </div></template>
If you have a component in nested directories such as:
| components/--| base/----| foo/------| Button.vue
... then the component's name will be based on its own path directory and filename, with duplicate segments being removed. Therefore, the component's name will be:
<BaseFooButton />
Button.vue
to be BaseFooButton.vue
.)If you want to use the Vue <component :is="someComputedComponent">
syntax, then you will need to use the resolveComponent
helper provided by Vue.
For example:
<template> <component :is="clickable ? MyButton : 'div'" /></template><script setup>const MyButton = resolveComponent('MyButton')</script>
resolveComponent
to handle dynamic components, make sure not to insert anything but the name of the component, which must be a string and not a variable.Alternatively, though not recommended, you can register all your components globally, which will create async chunks for all your components and make them available throughout your application.
export default defineNuxtConfig({ components: {+ global: true,+ dirs: ['~/components'] }, })
You can also selectively register some components globally by placing them in a ~/components/global
directory.
global
option can also be set per component directory.To dynamically import a component (also known as lazy-loading a component) all you need to do is add the Lazy
prefix to the component's name.
<template> <div> <TheHeader /> <slot /> <LazyTheFooter /> </div></template>
This is particularly useful if the component is not always needed. By using the Lazy
prefix you can delay loading the component code until the right moment, which can be helpful for optimizing your JavaScript bundle size.
<template> <div> <h1>Mountains</h1> <LazyMountainsList v-if="show" /> <button v-if="!show" @click="show = true">Show List</button> </div></template><script>export default { data() { return { show: false } }}</script>
You can also explicitly import components from #components
if you want or need to bypass Nuxt's auto-importing functionality.
<template> <div> <h1>Mountains</h1> <LazyMountainsList v-if="show" /> <button v-if="!show" @click="show = true">Show List</button> <NuxtLink to="/">Home</NuxtLink> </div></template><script setup> import { NuxtLink, LazyMountainsList } from '#components' const show = ref(false)</script>
<ClientOnly>
ComponentNuxt provides the <ClientOnly>
component for purposely rendering a component only on client side. To import a component only on the client, register the component in a client-side only plugin.
<template> <div> <Sidebar /> <ClientOnly> <!-- this component will only be rendered on client-side --> <Comments /> </ClientOnly> </div></template>
Use a slot as fallback until <ClientOnly>
is mounted on client side.
<template> <div> <Sidebar /> <!-- This renders the "span" element on the server side --> <ClientOnly fallbackTag="span"> <!-- this component will only be rendered on client side --> <Comments /> <template #fallback> <!-- this will be rendered on server side --> <p>Loading comments...</p> </template> </ClientOnly> </div></template>
If a component is meant to be rendered only client-side, you can add the .client
suffix to your component.
| components/--| Comments.client.vue
<template> <div> <!-- this component will only be rendered on client side --> <Comments /> </div></template>
.server
components are fallback components of .client
components.
| components/--| Comments.client.vue--| Comments.server.vue
<template> <div> <!-- this component will render Comments.server server-side then Comments.client once mounted in client-side --> <Comments /> </div></template>
Making Vue component libraries with automatic tree-shaking and component registration is super easy ✨
You can use the components:dirs
hook to extend the directory list without requiring user configuration in your Nuxt module.
Imagine a directory structure like this:
| node_modules/---| awesome-ui/------| components/---------| Alert.vue---------| Button.vue------| nuxt.js| pages/---| index.vue| nuxt.config.js
Then in awesome-ui/nuxt.js
you can use the components:dirs
hook:
import { defineNuxtModule } from '@nuxt/kit'import { fileURLToPath } from 'node:url'export default defineNuxtModule({ hooks: { 'components:dirs'(dirs) { // Add ./components dir to the list dirs.push({ path: fileURLToPath(new URL('./components', import.meta.url)), prefix: 'awesome' }) } }})
That's it! Now in your project, you can import your UI library as a Nuxt module in your nuxt.config
file:
export default { modules: ['awesome-ui/nuxt']}
... and directly use the module components (prefixed with awesome-
) in our pages/index.vue
:
<template> <div> My <AwesomeButton>UI button</AwesomeButton>! <awesome-alert>Here's an alert!</awesome-alert> </div></template>
It will automatically import the components only if used and also support HMR when updating your components in node_modules/awesome-ui/components/
.