A better models plugin for Vue.js
npm install vue-models
Clone the repository and run npm start
or view a live demo here.
import Vue from 'vue'
import VueModels from 'vue-models'
Vue.use(VueModels)
The Model class returns a Vue instance with some default helper methods and computed properties. The following is an example of extending the Model class:
import { Model } from 'vue-models'
export class User extends Model {
static defaults() {
return {
name: 'user',
computed: {
full_name() {
return `${this.first_name} ${this.last_name}`
}
}
}
}
static schema() {
return {
first_name: {
type: String
},
last_name: {
type: String
}
}
}
}
import UserModel from './models/user'
const user = new UserModel({
first_name: 'Jane',
last_name: 'Doe'
})
console.log(user.full_name) // returns 'Jane Doe'
When defining a model, use the defaults static method to set attributes, computed properties, and methods as you would a normal Vue instance. There are a few special built-in properties/methods, which can be overwritten via the second argument of the model constructor.
An overwriteable property that defaults to the name of the model (with rudimentary pluralization). To override the default value, either pass a new one as a computed property, or in the root level of the options.
For a custom static basePath:
import { Model } from 'vue-models'
export class Property extends Model {
static defaults() {
return {
name: 'property',
basePath: 'properties'
}
},
static schema() {
return {}
}
}
Or a computed basePath:
import { Model } from 'vue-models'
export class User extends Model {
static defaults() {
return {
name: 'user',
computed: {
basePath() {
return `${this.role}s`
}
}
}
}
static schema() {
return {
role: {
type: String
}
}
}
}
A computed property that defaults to ${basePath}/${id}, (ie. /users/12345678). This will be used for all CRUD operations except create, which will not have access to an id.
Returns either the basePath if the model is new, or the urlRoot if the model already has an id. This is used for all CRUD operations. If overrided, this property will be used for all CRUD operations.
Based on whether or not the model has an id. Affects whether or not Model.save is a POST or PUT.
The Model.set
method sets data on the model. If there is a naming conflict between a computed property and a data attribute, the data attribute will be skipped. When binding a model to a Vue component as described below, the following is a valid shortcut to the Model.set
method:
export default {
models: {
user() {
return new UserModel(data)
}
},
created() {
this.$user = {
id: 123
} // calls this.$user.set({ id: 123 })
}
}
Fetches the model via a GET to Model.url
and calls the Model.set
method with response data.
The save method passed the first argument to the Model.set
method and creates a POST request if the model is new, and a PUT for models that already have an id. The following properties may be passed in an object as the second argument:
path
: A string that will be appended to the basePath of the model when making the requestconsume
: A boolean that dictates whether or not to consume the response to the request (calls theset
method with the response data)
Sends a DELETE request for the model.
Uses the schema definition to reset all values to their default values.
Returns all data attributes and computed properties as json.
Models can be bound to a Vue component using the following syntax:
export default {
models: {
user() {
return new UserModel(data)
}
},
created() {
console.log(this.$user.full_name);
}
}
NOTE: By default, models are reset when the parent component is destroyed. To disable this, the persist: true
option can be provided in the model options (second argument in the model constructor).
The first argument of the model constructor is for data. Any data passed to the constructor will be set right away. The second argument is for options, which can be used to override any of the model's defaults.
Model classes use a static schema method to defined the initial data properties for the Vue instance. The schema format is heavily influenced by JSON Schema, with few differences. JSON Schema is frequently used for validation, while vue-models
uses a schema to define initial state, and to transform data. Data can be transformed by creating custom type classes that mimic the behavior of the native constructors. Run the demo for a comprehensive example of data transformation that handles extended JSON ObjectIds and ISODates.
The following is an example of some nested structures in a schema definition. It should look familar to those who have used JSON Schema.
import { Model } from 'vue-models'
export class User extends Model {
static defaults() {
return {
name: 'user'
}
}
static schema() {
return {
preferences: {
type: Object,
properties: {
notifications: {
type: Object,
properties: {
email: {
type: Boolean
},
text: {
type: Boolean
}
}
},
privacy: {
type: Object,
properties: {
sendBugReports: {
type: Boolean,
default: true
}
}
}
}
},
friends: {
type: Array,
items: {
type: Object,
properties: {
id: {
type: String
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
NOTE: By default, vue-models
will print warnings in the console is data is set on a model without a matching schema definition. This is particularly important for root-level keys, which Vue will not be able to make reactive. To disable these warnings, pass schemaWarnings: false
as an option when initting the plugin with Vue.
import Vue from 'vue'
import VueModels from 'vue-models'
Vue.use(VueModels, {
schemaWarnings: false
})
Below is an example of creating a custom type for converting MongoDB entended json ISODates to friendlier locale strings. The MongoDB date key $date
is passed to the parent class, Type
, so that the ISODate
class knows where to look for the value. The in
method defined how the data should be validated and processed before setting the state, and the out
method defines how the data should be transformed before encoding or saving the model.
import { Type } from 'vue-models'
export class ISODate extends Type {
constructor(value) {
super(value, '$date')
return this
}
in(value) {
const parsed = new Date(value)
if (!isNaN(parsed.getTime())) {
this.value = value
} else {
throw new TypeError(`Invalid date: "${value}"`)
}
}
out() {
return this.value
? new Date(this.value).toLocaleString()
: undefined
}
}
This plugin uses the vue-requests
plugin, which is a simple Vue plugin for the fetch API and includes the whatwg-fetch
polyfill.
Feel free to submit issues and/or pull requests! If you want to contribute, clone the repo and use the following to get started:
# install dependencies
npm install
# serve demo at localhost:8989
npm start
# run tests with jest
npm test
# bundle dist version
npm run build