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Vue.js 3 Design Patterns and Best Practices

Vue.js 3 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Pablo David Garaguso
4.8 (10)
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Vue.js 3 Design Patterns and Best Practices

Vue.js 3 Design Patterns and Best Practices

4.8 (10)
By: Pablo David Garaguso

Overview of this book

If you’re familiar with the progressive Vue framework for creating responsive user interfaces, you’ll be impressed with its latest iteration, Vue 3, which introduces new concepts and approaches design patterns that are uncommon in other libraries or frameworks. By building on your foundational knowledge of Vue 3 and software engineering principles, this book will enable you to evaluate the trade-offs of different approaches to building robust applications. This book covers Vue 3 from the basics, including components and directives, and progressively moves on to more advanced topics such as routing, state management, web workers, and offline storage. Starting with a simple page, you’ll gradually build a fully functional multithreaded, offline, and installable progressive web application. By the time you finish reading this Vue book, not only will you have learned how to build applications, but you’ll also understand how to solve common problems efficiently by applying existing design patterns. With this knowledge, you’ll avoid reinventing the wheel for every project, saving time and creating software that’s adaptable to future changes.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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The business delegate pattern

This pattern is used to hide the complexity of accessing business services or a business layer from the client or presentation layer by providing a single point of access with a well-defined and simple(r) interface. It can be reasoned to some degree as a variant or evolution of the proxies and decorator patterns that we saw in Chapter 2, Software Design Principles and Patterns, but applied at a larger logical scale between architectural layers. It usually involves at least the following entities:

  • A business delegate entity, which acts as the single point of entry for the client to all the available services
  • A business lookup or router entity whose function is to route the execution of the incoming request to the appropriate service
  • The business services that expose a common interface (directly or via a proxy pattern) with the provided function

The pattern can be represented for our purposes in the following diagram:

...

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