A simple CLI for scaffolding Vue.js projects.
Prerequisites: Node.js (>=4.x, 5.x preferred) and Git.
$ npm install -g vue-cli
$ vue init <template-name> <project-name>
Example:
$ vue init webpack my-project
The above command pulls the template from vuejs-templates/webpack, prompts for some information, and generates the project at ./my-project/
.
The purpose of official Vue project templates are to provide opinionated, battery-included development tooling setups so that users can get started with actual app code as fast as possible. However, these templates are un-opinionated in terms of how you structure your app code and what libraries you use in addition to Vue.js.
All official project templates are repos in the vuejs-templates organization. When a new template is added to the organization, you will be able to run vue init <template-name> <project-name>
to use that template. You can also run vue list
to see all available official templates.
Current available templates include:
-
webpack - A full-featured Webpack + vue-loader setup with hot reload, linting, testing & css extraction.
-
webpack-simple - A simple Webpack + vue-loader setup for quick prototyping.
-
browserify - A full-featured Browserify + vueify setup with hot-reload, linting & unit testing.
-
browserify-simple - A simple Browserify + vueify setup for quick prototyping.
-
simple - The simplest possible Vue setup in a single HTML file
It's unlikely to make everyone happy with the official templates. You can simply fork an official template and then use it via vue-cli
with:
vue init username/repo my-project
Where username/repo
is the GitHub repo shorthand for your fork.
The shorthand repo notation is passed to download-git-repo so you can also use things like bitbucket:username/repo
for a Bitbucket repo and username/repo#branch
for tags or branches.
If you would like to download from a private repository use the --clone
flag and the cli will use git clone
so your SHH keys are used.
Instead of a GitHub repo, you can also use a template on your local file system:
vue init ~/fs/path/to-custom-template my-project
-
A template repo must have a
template
directory that holds the template files. -
A template repo may have a
meta.json
file that provides metadata for the template. Themeta.json
can contain the following fields:-
prompts
: used to collect user options data; -
filters
: used to conditional filter files to render. -
completeMessage
: the message to be displayed to the user when the template has been generated. You can include custom instruction here.
-
The prompts
field in meta.json
should be an object hash containing prompts for the user. For each entry, the key is the variable name and the value is an Inquirer.js question object. Example:
{
"prompts": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"required": true,
"message": "Project name"
}
}
}
After all prompts are finished, all files inside template
will be rendered using Handlebars, with the prompt results as the data.
A prompt can be made conditional by adding a when
field, which should be a JavaScript expression evaluated with data collected from previous prompts. For example:
{
"prompts": {
"lint": {
"type": "confirm",
"message": "Use a linter?"
},
"lintConfig": {
"when": "lint",
"type": "list",
"message": "Pick a lint config",
"choices": [
"standard",
"airbnb",
"none"
]
}
}
}
The prompt for lintConfig
will only be triggered when the user answered yes to the lint
prompt.
Two commonly used Handlebars helpers, if_eq
and unless_eq
are pre-registered:
The filters
field in meta.json
should be an object hash containing file filtering rules. For each entry, the key is a minimatch glob pattern and the value is a JavaScript expression evaluated in the context of prompt answers data. Example:
{
"filters": {
"test/**/*": "needTests"
}
}
Files under test
will only be generated if the user answered yes to the prompt for needTests
.
Note that the dot
option for minimatch is set to true
so glob patterns would also match dotfiles by default.