Legacy Composition API
Nuxt Bridge provides access to Composition API syntax. It is specifically designed to be aligned with Nuxt 3. Because of this, there are a few extra steps to take when enabling Nuxt Bridge, if you have been using the Composition API previously.
Remove Modules
- Remove
@vue/composition-api
from your dependencies. - Remove
@nuxtjs/composition-api
from your dependencies (and from your modules innuxt.config
).
Using @vue/composition-api
If you have been using just @vue/composition-api
and not @nuxtjs/composition-api
, then things are very straightforward.
- First, remove the plugin where you are manually registering the Composition API. Nuxt Bridge will handle this for you.
- import Vue from 'vue' - import VueCompositionApi from '@vue/composition-api' - - Vue.use(VueCompositionApi)
- Otherwise, there is nothing you need to do. However, if you want, you can remove your explicit imports from
@vue/composition-api
and rely on Nuxt Bridge auto-importing them for you.
Migrating from @nuxtjs/composition-api
Nuxt Bridge implements the Composition API slightly differently from @nuxtjs/composition-api
and provides different composables (designed to be aligned with the composables that Nuxt 3 provides).
Because some composables have been removed and don't yet have a replacement, this will be a slightly more complicated process.
Remove @nuxtjs/composition-api/module
from your buildModules
You don't have to immediately update your imports yet - Nuxt Bridge will automatically provide a 'shim' for most imports you currently have, to give you time to migrate to the new, Nuxt 3-compatible composables, with the following exceptions:
withContext
has been removed. See below.useStatic
has been removed. There is no current replacement. Feel free to raise a discussion if you have a use case for this.reqRef
andreqSsrRef
, which were deprecated, have now been removed entirely. Follow the instructions below regarding ssrRef to replace this.
Set bridge.capi
import { defineNuxtConfig } from '@nuxt/bridge'
export default defineNuxtConfig({
bridge: {
capi: true,
nitro: false // If migration to Nitro is complete, set to true
}
})
For each other composable you are using from @nuxtjs/composition-api
, follow the steps below.
useFetch
$fetchState
and $fetch
have been removed.
const {
- $fetch,
- $fetchState,
+ fetch,
+ fetchState,
} = useFetch(() => { posts.value = await $fetch('/api/posts') })
defineNuxtMiddleware
This was a type-helper stub function that is now removed.
Remove the defineNuxtMiddleware
wrapper:
- import { defineNuxtMiddleware } from '@nuxtjs/composition-api`
- export default defineNuxtMiddleware((ctx) => {})
+ export default (ctx) => {}
For typescript support, you can use @nuxt/types
:
import type { Middleware } from '@nuxt/types'
export default <Middleware> function (ctx) { }
defineNuxtPlugin
This was a type-helper stub function that is now removed.
You may also keep using Nuxt 2-style plugins, by removing the function (as with defineNuxtMiddleware).
Remove the defineNuxtPlugin
wrapper:
- import { defineNuxtPlugin } from '@nuxtjs/composition-api'
- export default defineNuxtPlugin((ctx, inject) => {})
+ export default (ctx, inject) => {}
For typescript support, you can use @nuxt/types
:
import type { Plugin } from '@nuxt/types'
export default <Plugin> function (ctx, inject) {}
useRouter
and useRoute
Nuxt Bridge provides direct replacements for these composables via useRouter
and useRoute
.
The only key difference is that useRoute
no longer returns a computed property.
- import { useRouter, useRoute } from '@nuxtjs/composition-api'
const router = useRouter()
const route = useRoute()
- console.log(route.value.path)
+ console.log(route.path)