debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/development/fe_guide/style/vue.md
2020-06-23 00:09:42 +05:30

9 KiB

Vue.js style guide

Linting

We default to eslint-vue-plugin, with the plugin:vue/recommended. Please check this rules for more documentation.

Basic Rules

  1. The service has its own file

  2. The store has its own file

  3. Use a function in the bundle file to instantiate the Vue component:

    // bad
    class {
      init() {
        new Component({})
      }
    }
    
    // good
    document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => new Vue({
      el: '#element',
      components: {
        componentName
      },
      render: createElement => createElement('component-name'),
    }));
    
  4. Do not use a singleton for the service or the store

    // bad
    class Store {
      constructor() {
        if (!this.prototype.singleton) {
          // do something
        }
      }
    }
    
    // good
    class Store {
      constructor() {
        // do something
      }
    }
    
  5. Use .vue for Vue templates. Do not use %template in HAML.

Naming

  1. Extensions: Use .vue extension for Vue components. Do not use .js as file extension (#34371).

  2. Reference Naming: Use PascalCase for their instances:

    // bad
    import cardBoard from 'cardBoard.vue'
    
    components: {
      cardBoard,
    };
    
    // good
    import CardBoard from 'cardBoard.vue'
    
    components: {
      CardBoard,
    };
    
  3. Props Naming: Avoid using DOM component prop names.

  4. Props Naming: Use kebab-case instead of camelCase to provide props in templates.

    // bad
    <component class="btn">
    
    // good
    <component css-class="btn">
    
    // bad
    <component myProp="prop" />
    
    // good
    <component my-prop="prop" />
    

Alignment

  1. Follow these alignment styles for the template method:

    1. With more than one attribute, all attributes should be on a new line:

      // bad
      <component v-if="bar"
          param="baz" />
      
      <button class="btn">Click me</button>
      
      // good
      <component
        v-if="bar"
        param="baz"
      />
      
      <button class="btn">
        Click me
      </button>
      
    2. The tag can be inline if there is only one attribute:

      // good
        <component bar="bar" />
      
      // good
        <component
          bar="bar"
          />
      
      // bad
       <component
          bar="bar" />
      

Quotes

  1. Always use double quotes " inside templates and single quotes ' for all other JS.

    // bad
    template: `
      <button :class='style'>Button</button>
    `
    
    // good
    template: `
      <button :class="style">Button</button>
    `
    

Props

  1. Props should be declared as an object

    // bad
    props: ['foo']
    
    // good
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
        required: false,
        default: 'bar'
      }
    }
    
  2. Required key should always be provided when declaring a prop

    // bad
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
      }
    }
    
    // good
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
        required: false,
        default: 'bar'
      }
    }
    
  3. Default key should be provided if the prop is not required. Note: There are some scenarios where we need to check for the existence of the property. On those a default key should not be provided.

    // good
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
        required: false,
      }
    }
    
    // good
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
        required: false,
        default: 'bar'
      }
    }
    
    // good
    props: {
      foo: {
        type: String,
        required: true
      }
    }
    

Data

  1. data method should always be a function

    // bad
    data: {
      foo: 'foo'
    }
    
    // good
    data() {
      return {
        foo: 'foo'
      };
    }
    

Directives

  1. Shorthand @ is preferable over v-on

    // bad
    <component v-on:click="eventHandler"/>
    
    // good
    <component @click="eventHandler"/>
    
  2. Shorthand : is preferable over v-bind

    // bad
    <component v-bind:class="btn"/>
    
    // good
    <component :class="btn"/>
    
  3. Shorthand # is preferable over v-slot

    // bad
    <template v-slot:header></template>
    
    // good
    <template #header></template>
    

Closing tags

  1. Prefer self-closing component tags

    // bad
    <component></component>
    
    // good
    <component />
    

Component usage within templates

  1. Prefer a component's kebab-cased name over other styles when using it in a template

    // bad
    <MyComponent />
    
    // good
    <my-component />
    

Ordering

  1. Tag order in .vue file

    <script>
      // ...
    </script>
    
    <template>
      // ...
    </template>
    
    // We don't use scoped styles but there are few instances of this
    <style>
      // ...
    </style>
    
  2. Properties in a Vue Component: Check order of properties in components rule.

:key

When using v-for you need to provide a unique :key attribute for each item.

  1. If the elements of the array being iterated have an unique id it is advised to use it:

    <div
      v-for="item in items"
      :key="item.id"
    >
      <!-- content -->
    </div>
    
  2. When the elements being iterated don't have a unique ID, you can use the array index as the :key attribute

    <div
      v-for="(item, index) in items"
      :key="index"
    >
      <!-- content -->
    </div>
    
  3. When using v-for with template and there is more than one child element, the :key values must be unique. It's advised to use kebab-case namespaces.

    <template v-for="(item, index) in items">
      <span :key="`span-${index}`"></span>
      <button :key="`button-${index}`"></button>
    </template>
    
  4. When dealing with nested v-for use the same guidelines as above.

    <div
      v-for="item in items"
      :key="item.id"
    >
      <span
        v-for="element in array"
        :key="element.id"
      >
        <!-- content -->
      </span>
    </div>
    

Useful links:

  1. key
  2. Vue Style Guide: Keyed v-for

Vue and Bootstrap

  1. Tooltips: Do not rely on has-tooltip class name for Vue components

    // bad
    <span
      class="has-tooltip"
      title="Some tooltip text">
      Text
    </span>
    
    // good
    <span
      v-tooltip
      title="Some tooltip text">
      Text
    </span>
    
  2. Tooltips: When using a tooltip, include the tooltip directive, ./app/assets/javascripts/vue_shared/directives/tooltip.js

  3. Don't change data-original-title.

    // bad
    <span data-original-title="tooltip text">Foo</span>
    
    // good
    <span title="tooltip text">Foo</span>
    
    $('span').tooltip('_fixTitle');
    

The JavaScript/Vue Accord

The goal of this accord is to make sure we are all on the same page.

  1. When writing Vue, you may not use jQuery in your application.
    1. If you need to grab data from the DOM, you may query the DOM 1 time while bootstrapping your application to grab data attributes using dataset. You can do this without jQuery.
    2. You may use a jQuery dependency in Vue.js following this example from the docs.
    3. If an outside jQuery Event needs to be listen to inside the Vue application, you may use jQuery event listeners.
    4. We will avoid adding new jQuery events when they are not required. Instead of adding new jQuery events take a look at different methods to do the same task.
  2. You may query the window object one time, while bootstrapping your application for application specific data (e.g. scrollTo is ok to access anytime). Do this access during the bootstrapping of your application.
  3. You may have a temporary but immediate need to create technical debt by writing code that does not follow our standards, to be refactored later. Maintainers need to be ok with the tech debt in the first place. An issue should be created for that tech debt to evaluate it further and discuss. In the coming months you should fix that tech debt, with its priority to be determined by maintainers.
  4. When creating tech debt you must write the tests for that code before hand and those tests may not be rewritten. e.g. jQuery tests rewritten to Vue tests.
  5. You may choose to use VueX as a centralized state management. If you choose not to use VueX, you must use the store pattern which can be found in the Vue.js documentation.
  6. Once you have chosen a centralized state-management solution you must use it for your entire application. i.e. Don't mix and match your state-management solutions.