Form Handling
NOTE
The following documentation comes directly from the vuex.vuejs.org.
When using Vuex in strict mode, it could be a bit tricky to use v-model
on a piece of state that belongs to Vuex:
<input v-model="obj.message">
Assuming obj
is a computed property that returns an Object from the store, the v-model
here will attempt to directly mutate obj.message
when the user types in the input. In strict mode, this will result in an error because the mutation is not performed inside an explicit Vuex mutation handler.
The "Vuex way" to deal with it is binding the <input>
's value and call an action on the input
or change
event:
<input :value="message" @input="updateMessage">
// ...
computed: {
...mapState({
message: state => state.obj.message
})
},
methods: {
updateMessage (e) {
this.$store.commit('updateMessage', e.target.value)
}
}
And here's the mutation handler:
// ...
mutations: {
updateMessage (state, message) {
state.obj.message = message
}
}
Two-way Computed Property
Admittedly, the above is quite a bit more verbose than v-model
+ local state, and we lose some of the useful features from v-model
as well. An alternative approach is using a two-way computed property with a setter:
<input v-model="message">
// ...
computed: {
message: {
get () {
return this.$store.state.obj.message
},
set (value) {
this.$store.commit('updateMessage', value)
}
}
}