Custom Elements Interop changes breaking
Overview
- BREAKING: Custom elements whitelisting is now performed during template compilation, and should be configured via compiler options instead of runtime config.
- BREAKING: Special
is
prop usage is restricted to the reserved<component>
tag only. - NEW: There is new
v-is
directive to support 2.x use cases whereis
was used on native elements to work around native HTML parsing restrictions.
Autonomous Custom Elements
If we want to add a custom element defined outside of Vue (e.g. using the Web Components API), we need to ‘instruct’ Vue to treat it as a custom element. Let’s use the following template as an example.
<plastic-button></plastic-button>
2.x Syntax
In Vue 2.x, whitelisting tags as custom elements was done via Vue.config.ignoredElements
:
// This will make Vue ignore custom element defined outside of Vue
// (e.g., using the Web Components APIs)
Vue.config.ignoredElements = ['plastic-button']
3.x Syntax
In Vue 3.0, this check is performed during template compilation. To instruct the compiler to treat <plastic-button>
as a custom element:
If using a build step: pass the
isCustomElement
option to the Vue template compiler. If usingvue-loader
, this should be passed viavue-loader
‘scompilerOptions
option:// in webpack config
rules: [
{
test: /\.vue$/,
use: 'vue-loader',
options: {
compilerOptions: {
isCustomElement: tag => tag === 'plastic-button'
}
}
}
// ...
]
If using on-the-fly template compilation, pass it via
app.config.isCustomElement
:const app = Vue.createApp({})
app.config.isCustomElement = tag => tag === 'plastic-button'
It’s important to note the runtime config only affects runtime template compilation - it won’t affect pre-compiled templates.
Customized Built-in Elements
The Custom Elements specification provides a way to use custom elements as Customized Built-in Element by adding the is
attribute to a built-in element:
<button is="plastic-button">Click Me!</button>
Vue’s usage of the is
special prop was simulating what the native attribute does before it was made universally available in browsers. However, in 2.x it was interpreted as rendering a Vue component with the name plastic-button
. This blocks the native usage of Customized Built-in Element mentioned above.
In 3.0, we are limiting Vue’s special treatment of the is
prop to the <component>
tag only.
When used on the reserved
<component>
tag, it will behave exactly the same as in 2.x;When used on normal components, it will behave like a normal prop:
<foo is="bar" />
- 2.x behavior: renders the
bar
component. - 3.x behavior: renders the
foo
component and passing theis
prop.
When used on plain elements, it will be passed to the
createElement
call as theis
option, and also rendered as a native attribute. This supports the usage of customized built-in elements.<button is="plastic-button">Click Me!</button>
2.x behavior: renders the
plastic-button
component.3.x behavior: renders a native button by calling
document.createElement('button', { is: 'plastic-button' })
v-is for In-DOM Template Parsing Workarounds
Note: this section only affects cases where Vue templates are directly written in the page’s HTML. When using in-DOM templates, the template is subject to native HTML parsing rules. Some HTML elements, such as
<ul>
,<ol>
,<table>
and<select>
have restrictions on what elements can appear inside them, and some elements such as<li>
,<tr>
, and<option>
can only appear inside certain other elements.
2x Syntax
In Vue 2 we recommended working around with these restrictions by using the is
prop on a native tag:
<table>
<tr is="blog-post-row"></tr>
</table>
3.x Syntax
With the behavior change of is
, we introduce a new directive v-is
for working around these cases:
<table>
<tr v-is="'blog-post-row'"></tr>
</table>
WARNING
v-is
functions like a dynamic 2.x :is
binding - so to render a component by its registered name, its value should be a JavaScript string literal:
<!-- Incorrect, nothing will be rendered -->
<tr v-is="blog-post-row"></tr>
<!-- Correct -->
<tr v-is="'blog-post-row'"></tr>
Migration Strategy
Replace
config.ignoredElements
with eithervue-loader
‘scompilerOptions
(with the build step) orapp.config.isCustomElement
(with on-the-fly template compilation)Change all non-
<component>
tags withis
usage to<component is="...">
(for SFC templates) orv-is
(for in-DOM templates).