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Vuex ORM

Vuex ORM

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Vuex ORM is a plugin for Vuex to enable Object-Relational Mapping access to the Vuex Store. Heavily inspired by Redux recipe of "Normalizing State Shape" and "Updating Normalized Data".

Vuex ORM lets you create "normalized" data schema within Vuex Store with relationships such as "Has One" and "Belongs To Many" like any other usual ORM library. It also provides fluent API to get, search and update Store state.

Learn more about the concept and motivation of Vuex ORM at What Is Vuex ORM?.

Documentation

You can check out the full documentation for Vuex ORM at https://vuex-orm.github.io/vuex-orm.

Questions & Discussions

Join us on our Slack Channel for any questions and discussions.

While there is the Slack Channel, do not hesitate to open an issue for any question you might have. We're always more than happy to hear any feedback, and we don't care what kind of form they are.

Examples

You can find example application built with Vuex ORM at https://github.com/vuex-orm/vuex-orm-examples.

Quick Start

Install Vuex ORM

You can install Vuex ORM via npm.

$ npm install @vuex-orm/core

Create Your Models

First, let's declare your models extending Vuex ORM Model. Here we assume that there are Post model and User model. Post model has a relationship with User – the post "belongs to" a user by author key.

// User Model
import { Model } from '@vuex-orm/core'

export default class User extends Model {
  // This is the name used as module name of the Vuex Store.
  static entity = 'users'

  // List of all fields (schema) of the post model. `this.attr` is used
  // for the generic field type. The argument is the default value.
  static fields () {
    return {
      id: this.attr(null),
      name: this.attr(''),
      email: this.attr('')
    }
  }
}


// Post Model
import { Model } from '@vuex-orm/core'
import User from './User'

export default class Post extends Model {
  static entity = 'posts'

  static fields () {
    // `this.belongsTo` is for the belongs to relationship.
    return {
      id: this.attr(null),
      user_id: this.attr(null),
      title: this.attr(''),
      body: this.attr(''),
      published: this.attr(false),
      author: this.belongsTo(User, 'user_id')
    }
  }
}

With above example, you can see that the author field at Post model has a relation of belongsTo with User model.

Create Your Modules

Next, you might want to create Vuex Module to register with models. Modules are just simple Vuex Module that correspond to the Models. Vuex ORM uses this module to interact with Vuex Store.

Vuex ORM is going to add any necessary states, getters, actions, and mutations, so you do not have to add anything to the modules, but if you want you can. When you do, just treat them as standard Vuex Module.

// The users module. If you do not need any specific features, you can
// leave it as an empty object.
export default {}

// The posts module. You can add any additional things you want.
export default {
  state: {
    fetched: false
  },

  actions: {
    fetch ({ commit }) {
      commit('fetch')
    }
  },

  mutations: {
    fetch (state) {
      state.fetched = true
    }
  }
}

Register Models and Modules to the Vuex Store

Now it is time for you to register models and modules to the Vuex. To do so, you first have to register models to the Database and then register the database to Vuex Store as Vuex plugin using VuexORM's install method.

import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'
import VuexORM from '@vuex-orm/core'
import User from './User'
import Post from './Post'
import users from './users'
import posts from './posts'

Vue.use(Vuex)

// Create a new database instance.
const database = new VuexORM.Database()

// Register Models and Modules. The First argument is the Model, and
// second is the Module.
database.register(User, users)
database.register(Post, posts)

// Create Vuex Store and register database through Vuex ORM.
const store = new Vuex.Store({
  plugins: [VuexORM.install(database)]
})

export default store

Now you are ready to go. Vuex ORM is going to create entities module in Vuex Store. Which means you can access Vuex Store by store.state.entities.

Creating Records to the Vuex Store

You can use create action to create a new record in Vuex Store. Let's say we want to save a single post data to the store.

// Assuming this data structure is the response from the API backend.
const posts = [
  {
    id: 1,
    title: 'Hello, world!',
    body: 'Some awesome body...',
    author: {
      id: 1,
      name: 'John Doe',
      email: 'john@example.com'
    }
  }
]

store.dispatch('entities/posts/create', { data: posts })

With above action, Vuex ORM creates the following schema at Vuex Store.

// Inside `store.state.entities`.
{
  posts: {
    data: {
      '1': {
        id: 1,
        user_id: 1,
        title: 'Hello, world!',
        body: 'Some awesome body...',
        author: 1
      }
    }
  },

  users: {
    data: {
      '1': {
        id: 1,
        name: 'John Doe',
        email: 'john@example.com'
      }
    }
  }
}

See how posts and users decoupled from each other. This is what it means for "normalizing" the data.

Accessing the Data

To access data, you may just access the store state directly as usual.

store.state.entities.posts.data[1].title // <- 'Hello, world!'
store.state.entities.users.data[1].name  // <- 'John Doe'

However, Vuex ORM provides a way to query, and fetch data in an organized way through Vuex Getters.

// Fetch all post records. The result will be the instance of Post model!
store.getters['entities/posts/all']()

/*
  [
    Post { id: 1, user_id: 1, title: 'Hello, world!', body: 'Some awesome body...', author: 1 },
    ...
  ]
*/

// Fetch single record with relation.
store.getters['entities/posts/query']().with('author').first(1)

/*
  Post {
    id: 1,
    user_id: 1,
    title: 'Hello, world!',
    body: 'Some awesome body...',
    author: User {
      id: 1,
      name: 'John Doe',
      email: 'john@example.com'
    }
  }
*/

Cool right? To get to know more about Vuex ORM, please see the documentation

Plugins

Vuex ORM can be extended via a plugin to add additional features. Here is the list of available plugins.

  • vuex-orm-search – The plugin adds a search() method to the vuex-orm query methods to easily filter matched records using fuzzy search logic from the Fuse.js library.
  • vuex-orm-apollo – The plugin to sync the data against a GraphQL API via Apollo.

Contribution

We are excited that you are interested in contributing to Vuex ORM! Anything from raising an issue, submitting an idea of a new feature, or making a pull request is welcome!

Development

$ npm run build

Compile files and generate bundles in dist directory.

$ npm run lint

Lint files using a rule of Standard JS.

$ npm run test

Run the test using Mocha Webpack.

$ npm run coverage

Generate test coverage in coverage directory.

License

The Vuex ORM is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.