Vue.js

The Vue.js toolchain is being evaluated as an officially supported way of building UI within the MediaWiki ecosystem. It's currently experimental and not ready for wide use as there are a number of unknowns but more importantly, no well thought out conventions yet. This page documents best practices and other knowledge that surfaces during evaluation. In general, this documentation should be minimal because it defines only MediaWiki-specific pieces, and largely refers to the official documentation.

Pre-built (bandwidth and client performant at the expense of extra work)
For professional developers building high performance experiences, pre-compilation and minificiation is recommended. However, this requires extra per-repo configuration changes which are currently undocumented. This extra configuration will be eliminated or formalized and minimized if the deploy build step RFC succeeds.

On the fly compilation (big and slow but easy to develop)
ResourceLoader will soon have built-in support for parsing single-file components. This lets you write Vue.js with very little configuration in the context of a MediaWiki installation which may be valuable in some contexts as well as for developers uncomfortable with compilers.

The module in ResourceLoader
MediaWiki core comes with a copy of Vue, and some small MediaWiki-specific plugins for Vue. These live in the  module. In code that sets up a new Vue instance, (i.e. calls ), you should make the   module a dependency of your module, then obtain the Vue object using. You do not have to call  to register the MediaWiki-specific plugins, this is done for you.

The i18n plugin
The  module comes with a small i18n plugin that wraps MediaWiki's i18n system, so you can use MediaWiki i18n messages in your templates. This plugin creates an  function that you can use inside templates, which is an alias for. For plain text messages (most cases), you can simply use: You can pass parameters either variadically, or as an array: The  function returns a Message object, so you can use it in all the same ways that you can use   in "normal" JS code. Remember that all message keys you use have to be added to the  array in the ResourceLoader module definition.

Parsed messages
One important limitation of  is that you can't use it for parsed messages that return HTML. This is because template interpolations ( syntax) can only return plain text, and are always HTML-escaped: The code above displays , as plain text. To get Vue to accept raw HTML, you have to use the  directive. Because writing  is verbose and annoying, the i18n plugin provides a shortcut using the   directive. Note the nested quotes in the second example! uses the message named, while   uses the message whose name is stored in the variable. See the documentation comments in  for a more detailed explanation.

Parsed messages with parameters
The  directive does not currently support passing parameters to the message. Support for this may be added in the future. The recommended way to pass a parameter to a parsed message (or to do other complicated things) is to put the parsed message in a computed property. It's possible to do these kinds of things inline, but using a computed property is recommended for readability.

How to use on the fly compilation
Once the code supporting this is merged, you'll be able to add a .vue file to any package module as if it were a script file: The .vue file must contain a template and JavaScript code that exports a component registration object. It can also (optionally) contain styles: You can then  the .vue file just like any other script file. For example, you can it as a root component as follows: Or you can use it as a nested component inside another component: Some modules have an init script as their main file (usually called ) that creates a new Vue instance to take over a DOM element on the page and replace it with a Vue component. Other modules just export one or more reusable components; their main file is either a  file with the component that's exported, or a script file that exports several components, e.g.:

External resources
Most important:


 * Official guide
 * Official API documentation
 * Official style guide
 * Official devtools browser extensions

Additional

 * Vue.js News (weekly newsletter)

Training vendors

 * Vue School
 * Frontend Masters
 * Vue Mastery

GitLab

 * Vue.js frontend development guidelines
 * Why we chose Vue.js
 * How we do Vue: one year later

Testing
You should write tests! The current recommendation is to use Jest.