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Vue CLI 3 Quick Start Guide

Vue CLI 3 Quick Start Guide

By : Imsirovic
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Vue CLI 3 Quick Start Guide

Vue CLI 3 Quick Start Guide

By: Imsirovic

Overview of this book

The sprawling landscape of various tools in JavaScript web development is becoming overwhelming. This book will show you how Vue CLI 3 can help you take back control of the tool chain. To that end, we'll begin by configuring webpack, utilizing HMR, and using single-file .vue components. We'll also use SCSS, ECMAScript, and TypeScript. We'll unit test with Jest and perform E2E testing with Cypress. This book will show you how to configure Vue CLI as your default way of building Vue projects. You'll discover the reasons behind using webpack, babel, eslint, and other modern JavaScript toolchain technologies. You'll learn about the inner workings of each through the lens of Vue CLI 3. We'll explore the extendibility of Vue CLI with the built-in settings, and various core and third-party plugins. Vue CLI helps you work with Vue components, routers, directives, and services in the Vue ecosystem. While learning these concepts, you'll examine the evolution of JavaScript. You'll learn about use of npm, IIFEs, modules in JavaScript, Common.js modules, task runners, npm scripts, module bundlers, and webpack. You'll get familiar with the reasons why Vue CLI 3 is set up the way it is. You'll also learn to perform linting with ESLint and Prettier. Towards the end, we'll introduce you to working with styles and SCSS. Finally, we'll show you how to deploy your very own Vue project on Github Pages.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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What is webpack?

Webpack is a module bundler for the web. Some people also refer to it as an asset compiler for web applications.

According to webpack's GitHub page:

"It packs many modules into a few bundled assets and so on. Modules can be CommonJs, AMD, ES6 modules, CSS, images, JSON, CoffeeScript, LESS, and so on, and your custom stuff."

Earlier in this chapter, in the section titled Working with modules in Node.js, we barely scratched the surface of how modules get exported and required in Node apps. What we did not mention is that there are all kinds of different module syntaxes that we can use. As already mentioned, Node.js works with the CommonJS module syntax. Besides CommonJS, there is also Asynchronous Module Definition (AMD). Alongside AMD, you can use ESM modules. With ESM modules, the syntax is a bit different from what we saw earlier.

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