Component Instance
INFO
This page documents the built-in properties and methods exposed on the component public instance, i.e. this.
All properties listed on this page are readonly (except nested properties in $data).
$data
The object returned from the data option, made reactive by the component. The component instance proxies access to the properties on its data object.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $data: object }
$props
An object representing the component's current, resolved props.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $props: object }Details
Only props declared via the
propsoption will be included. The component instance proxies access to the properties on its props object.
$el
The root DOM node that the component instance is managing.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $el: Node | undefined }Details
$elwill beundefineduntil the component is mounted.- For components with a single root element,
$elwill point to that element. - For components with text root,
$elwill point to the text node. - For components with multiple root nodes,
$elwill be the placeholder DOM node that Vue uses to keep track of the component's position in the DOM (a text node, or a comment node in SSR hydration mode).
TIP
For consistency, it is recommended to use template refs for direct access to elements instead of relying on
$el.- For components with a single root element,
$options
The resolved component options used for instantiating the current component instance.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $options: ComponentOptions }Details
The
$optionsobject exposes the resolved options for the current component and is the merge result of these possible sources:- Global mixins
- Component
extendsbase - Component mixins
It is typically used to support custom component options:
jsconst app = createApp({ customOption: 'foo', created() { console.log(this.$options.customOption) // => 'foo' } })See also
app.config.optionMergeStrategies
$parent
The parent instance, if the current instance has one. It will be null for the root instance itself.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $parent: ComponentPublicInstance | null }
$root
The root component instance of the current component tree. If the current instance has no parents this value will be itself.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $root: ComponentPublicInstance }
$slots
An object representing the slots passed by the parent component.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $slots: { [name: string]: Slot } } type Slot = (...args: any[]) => VNode[]Details
Typically used when manually authoring render functions, but can also be used to detect whether a slot is present.
Each slot is exposed on
this.$slotsas a function that returns an array of vnodes under the key corresponding to that slot's name. The default slot is exposed asthis.$slots.default.If a slot is a scoped slot, arguments passed to the slot functions are available to the slot as its slot props.
See also Render Functions - Rendering Slots
$refs
An object of DOM elements and component instances, registered via template refs.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $refs: { [name: string]: Element | ComponentPublicInstance | null } }See also
$attrs
An object that contains the component's fallthrough attributes.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $attrs: object }Details
Fallthrough Attributes are attributes and event handlers passed by the parent component, but not declared as a prop or an emitted event by the child.
By default, everything in
$attrswill be automatically inherited on the component's root element if there is only a single root element. This behavior is disabled if the component has multiple root nodes, and can be explicitly disabled with theinheritAttrsoption.See also
$watch()
Imperative API for creating watchers.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $watch( source: string | (() => any), callback: WatchCallback, options?: WatchOptions ): StopHandle } type WatchCallback<T> = ( value: T, oldValue: T, onCleanup: (cleanupFn: () => void) => void ) => void interface WatchOptions { immediate?: boolean // default: false deep?: boolean // default: false flush?: 'pre' | 'post' | 'sync' // default: 'pre' onTrack?: (event: DebuggerEvent) => void onTrigger?: (event: DebuggerEvent) => void } type StopHandle = () => voidDetails
The first argument is the watch source. It can be a component property name string, a simple dot-delimited path string, or a getter function.
The second argument is the callback function. The callback receives the new value and the old value of the watched source.
immediate: trigger the callback immediately on watcher creation. Old value will beundefinedon the first call.deep: force deep traversal of the source if it is an object, so that the callback fires on deep mutations. See Deep Watchers.flush: adjust the callback's flush timing. See Callback Flush Timing andwatchEffect().onTrack / onTrigger: debug the watcher's dependencies. See Watcher Debugging.
Example
Watch a property name:
jsthis.$watch('a', (newVal, oldVal) => {})Watch a dot-delimited path:
jsthis.$watch('a.b', (newVal, oldVal) => {})Using getter for more complex expressions:
jsthis.$watch( // every time the expression `this.a + this.b` yields // a different result, the handler will be called. // It's as if we were watching a computed property // without defining the computed property itself. () => this.a + this.b, (newVal, oldVal) => {} )Stopping the watcher:
jsconst unwatch = this.$watch('a', cb) // later... unwatch()See also
$emit()
Trigger a custom event on the current instance. Any additional arguments will be passed into the listener's callback function.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $emit(event: string, ...args: any[]): void }Example
jsexport default { created() { // only event this.$emit('foo') // with additional arguments this.$emit('bar', 1, 2, 3) } }See also
$forceUpdate()
Force the component instance to re-render.
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $forceUpdate(): void }Details
This should be rarely needed given Vue's fully automatic reactivity system. The only cases where you may need it is when you have explicitly created non-reactive component state using advanced reactivity APIs.
$nextTick()
Instance-bound version of the global nextTick().
Type
tsinterface ComponentPublicInstance { $nextTick(callback?: (this: ComponentPublicInstance) => void): Promise<void> }Details
The only difference from the global version of
nextTick()is that the callback passed tothis.$nextTick()will have itsthiscontext bound to the current component instance.See also
nextTick()