Modules
Due to using a single state tree, all states of our application are contained inside one big object. However, as our application grows in scale, the store can get really bloated.
To help with that, Vuex allows us to divide our store into modules. Each module can contain its own state, mutations, actions, getters, and even nested modules - it's fractal all the way down:
const moduleA = {
state: () => ({ ... }),
mutations: { ... },
actions: { ... },
getters: { ... }
}
const moduleB = {
state: () => ({ ... }),
mutations: { ... },
actions: { ... }
}
const store = createStore({
modules: {
a: moduleA,
b: moduleB
}
})
store.state.a // -> `moduleA`'s state
store.state.b // -> `moduleB`'s state
Module Local State
Inside a module's mutations and getters, the first argument received will be the module's local state.
const moduleA = {
state: () => ({
count: 0
}),
mutations: {
increment (state) {
// `state` is the local module state
state.count++
}
},
getters: {
doubleCount (state) {
return state.count * 2
}
}
}
Similarly, inside module actions, context.state
will expose the local state, and root state will be exposed as context.rootState
:
const moduleA = {
// ...
actions: {
incrementIfOddOnRootSum ({ state, commit, rootState }) {
if ((state.count + rootState.count) % 2 === 1) {
commit('increment')
}
}
}
}
Also, inside module getters, the root state will be exposed as their 3rd argument:
const moduleA = {
// ...
getters: {
sumWithRootCount (state, getters, rootState) {
return state.count + rootState.count
}
}
}
Namespacing
By default, actions and mutations are still registered under the global namespace - this allows multiple modules to react to the same action/mutation type. Getters are also registered in the global namespace by default. However, this currently has no functional purpose (it's as is to avoid breaking changes). You must be careful not to define two getters with the same name in different, non-namespaced modules, resulting in an error.
If you want your modules to be more self-contained or reusable, you can mark it as namespaced with namespaced: true
. When the module is registered, all of its getters, actions and mutations will be automatically namespaced based on the path the module is registered at. For example:
const store = createStore({
modules: {
account: {
namespaced: true,
// module assets
state: () => ({ ... }), // module state is already nested and not affected by namespace option
getters: {
isAdmin () { ... } // -> getters['account/isAdmin']
},
actions: {
login () { ... } // -> dispatch('account/login')
},
mutations: {
login () { ... } // -> commit('account/login')
},
// nested modules
modules: {
// inherits the namespace from parent module
myPage: {
state: () => ({ ... }),
getters: {
profile () { ... } // -> getters['account/profile']
}
},
// further nest the namespace
posts: {
namespaced: true,
state: () => ({ ... }),
getters: {
popular () { ... } // -> getters['account/posts/popular']
}
}
}
}
}
})
Namespaced getters and actions will receive localized getters
, dispatch
and commit
. In other words, you can use the module assets without writing prefix in the same module. Toggling between namespaced or not does not affect the code inside the module.
Accessing Global Assets in Namespaced Modules
If you want to use global state and getters, rootState
and rootGetters
are passed as the 3rd and 4th arguments to getter functions, and also exposed as properties on the context
object passed to action functions.
To dispatch actions or commit mutations in the global namespace, pass { root: true }
as the 3rd argument to dispatch
and commit
.
modules: {
foo: {
namespaced: true,
getters: {
// `getters` is localized to this module's getters
// you can use rootGetters via 4th argument of getters
someGetter (state, getters, rootState, rootGetters) {
getters.someOtherGetter // -> 'foo/someOtherGetter'
rootGetters.someOtherGetter // -> 'someOtherGetter'
rootGetters['bar/someOtherGetter'] // -> 'bar/someOtherGetter'
},
someOtherGetter: state => { ... }
},
actions: {
// dispatch and commit are also localized for this module
// they will accept `root` option for the root dispatch/commit
someAction ({ dispatch, commit, getters, rootGetters }) {
getters.someGetter // -> 'foo/someGetter'
rootGetters.someGetter // -> 'someGetter'
rootGetters['bar/someGetter'] // -> 'bar/someGetter'
dispatch('someOtherAction') // -> 'foo/someOtherAction'
dispatch('someOtherAction', null, { root: true }) // -> 'someOtherAction'
commit('someMutation') // -> 'foo/someMutation'
commit('someMutation', null, { root: true }) // -> 'someMutation'
},
someOtherAction (ctx, payload) { ... }
}
}
}
Register Global Action in Namespaced Modules
If you want to register global actions in namespaced modules, you can mark it with root: true
and place the action definition to function handler
. For example:
{
actions: {
someOtherAction ({dispatch}) {
dispatch('someAction')
}
},
modules: {
foo: {
namespaced: true,
actions: {
someAction: {
root: true,
handler (namespacedContext, payload) { ... } // -> 'someAction'
}
}
}
}
}
Binding Helpers with Namespace
When binding a namespaced module to components with the mapState
, mapGetters
, mapActions
and mapMutations
helpers, it can get a bit verbose:
computed: {
...mapState({
a: state => state.some.nested.module.a,
b: state => state.some.nested.module.b
}),
...mapGetters([
'some/nested/module/someGetter', // -> this['some/nested/module/someGetter']
'some/nested/module/someOtherGetter', // -> this['some/nested/module/someOtherGetter']
])
},
methods: {
...mapActions([
'some/nested/module/foo', // -> this['some/nested/module/foo']()
'some/nested/module/bar' // -> this['some/nested/module/bar']()
])
}
In such cases, you can pass the module namespace string as the first argument to the helpers so that all bindings are done using that module as the context. The above can be simplified to:
computed: {
...mapState('some/nested/module', {
a: state => state.a,
b: state => state.b
}),
...mapGetters('some/nested/module', [
'someGetter', // -> this.someGetter
'someOtherGetter', // -> this.someOtherGetter
])
},
methods: {
...mapActions('some/nested/module', [
'foo', // -> this.foo()
'bar' // -> this.bar()
])
}
Furthermore, you can create namespaced helpers by using createNamespacedHelpers
. It returns an object having new component binding helpers that are bound with the given namespace value:
import { createNamespacedHelpers } from 'vuex'
const { mapState, mapActions } = createNamespacedHelpers('some/nested/module')
export default {
computed: {
// look up in `some/nested/module`
...mapState({
a: state => state.a,
b: state => state.b
})
},
methods: {
// look up in `some/nested/module`
...mapActions([
'foo',
'bar'
])
}
}
Caveat for Plugin Developers
You may care about unpredictable namespacing for your modules when you create a plugin that provides the modules and let users add them to a Vuex store. Your modules will be also namespaced if the plugin users add your modules under a namespaced module. To adapt this situation, you may need to receive a namespace value via your plugin option:
// get namespace value via plugin option
// and returns Vuex plugin function
export function createPlugin (options = {}) {
return function (store) {
// add namespace to plugin module's types
const namespace = options.namespace || ''
store.dispatch(namespace + 'pluginAction')
}
}
Dynamic Module Registration
You can register a module after the store has been created with the store.registerModule
method:
import { createStore } from 'vuex'
const store = createStore({ /* options */ })
// register a module `myModule`
store.registerModule('myModule', {
// ...
})
// register a nested module `nested/myModule`
store.registerModule(['nested', 'myModule'], {
// ...
})
The module's state will be exposed as store.state.myModule
and store.state.nested.myModule
.
Dynamic module registration makes it possible for other Vue plugins to also leverage Vuex for state management by attaching a module to the application's store. For example, the vuex-router-sync
library integrates vue-router with vuex by managing the application's route state in a dynamically attached module.
You can also remove a dynamically registered module with store.unregisterModule(moduleName)
. Note you cannot remove static modules (declared at store creation) with this method.
Note that you may check if the module is already registered to the store or not via store.hasModule(moduleName)
method. One thing to keep in mind is that nested modules should be passed as arrays for both the registerModule
and hasModule
and not as a string with the path to the module.
Preserving state
It may be likely that you want to preserve the previous state when registering a new module, such as preserving state from a Server Side Rendered app. You can achieve this with preserveState
option: store.registerModule('a', module, { preserveState: true })
When you set preserveState: true
, the module is registered, actions, mutations and getters are added to the store, but the state is not. It's assumed that your store state already contains state for that module and you don't want to overwrite it.
Module Reuse
Sometimes we may need to create multiple instances of a module, for example:
- Creating multiple stores that use the same module (e.g. To avoid stateful singletons in the SSR when the
runInNewContext
option isfalse
or'once'
); - Register the same module multiple times in the same store.
If we use a plain object to declare the state of the module, then that state object will be shared by reference and cause cross store/module state pollution when it's mutated.
This is actually the exact same problem with data
inside Vue components. So the solution is also the same - use a function for declaring module state (supported in 2.3.0+):
const MyReusableModule = {
state: () => ({
foo: 'bar'
}),
// mutations, actions, getters...
}
© 2015–present Evan You
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://next.vuex.vuejs.org/guide/modules.html