- 📘 Documentation: https://nuxtjs.org
- 🎬 Video: 1 minute demo
- 🐦 Twitter: @nuxt_js
$ npm install nuxt --save
Add a script to your package.json like this:
{
"scripts": {
"start": "nuxt"
}
}
After that, the file-system is the main API. Every .vue file becomes a route that gets automatically processed and rendered.
Populate ./pages/index.vue
inside your project:
<template>
<h1>Hello {{ name }}!</h1>
</template>
<script>
export default {
data: () => {
return { name: 'world' }
}
}
</script>
And then run:
npm start
Go to http://localhost:3000
So far, we get:
- Automatic transpilation and bundling (with webpack and babel)
- Hot code reloading
- Server rendering and indexing of
pages/
- Static file serving.
./static/
is mapped to/
- Configurable with a
nuxt.config.js
file - Custom layouts with the
layouts/
directory - Code splitting via webpack
const Nuxt = require('nuxt')
// Launch nuxt build with given options
let config = require('./nuxt.config.js')
let nuxt = new Nuxt(config)
nuxt.build()
.then(() => {
// You can use nuxt.render(req, res) or nuxt.renderRoute(route, context)
})
.catch((e) => {
// An error appended during the build
})
You might want to use your own server with you configurations, your API and everything awesome your created with. That's why you can use nuxt.js as a middleware. It's recommended to use it at the end of your middlewares since it will handle the rendering of your web application and won't call next()
app.use(nuxt.render)
This is mostly used for nuxt generate
and tests purposes but you might found another utility!
nuxt.renderRoute('/about', context)
.then(function ({ html, error }) {
// You can check error to know if your app displayed the error page for this route
// Useful to set the correct status status code if an error appended:
if (error) {
return res.status(error.statusCode || 500).send(html)
}
res.send(html)
})
.catch(function (error) {
// And error appended while rendering the route
})
Please take a look at the examples/ directory.
To deploy, instead of running nuxt, you probably want to build ahead of time. Therefore, building and starting are separate commands:
nuxt build
nuxt start
For example, to deploy with now
a package.json
like follows is recommended:
{
"name": "my-app",
"dependencies": {
"nuxt": "latest"
},
"scripts": {
"dev": "nuxt",
"build": "nuxt build",
"start": "nuxt start"
}
}
Then run now
and enjoy!
Note: we recommend putting .nuxt
in .npmignore
or .gitignore
.