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1.0.0 Dark Light System

Vue

Vue plays nice with custom elements, so you can use Lynk in your Vue apps with ease.

These instructions are only for Vue 3 and above.

Installation

To add Lynk to your Vue app, install the package from npm.

npm install @uplynk/lynk-design

Next, include a theme and set the base path for icons and other assets. In this example, we’ll import the light theme and use the CDN as a base path.

// main.js or main.ts
import '@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/themes/dark.css';
import { setBasePath } from '@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/utilities/base-path';

setBasePath('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@uplynk/lynk-design@1.0.0/cdn/');

const app = createApp(App);
If you’d rather not use the CDN for assets, you can create a build task that copies `node_modules/@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/assets` into a public folder in your app. Then you can point the base path to that folder instead.

Configuration

If you haven’t configured your Vue.js project to work with custom elements/web components, follow the instructions here based on your project type to ensure your project will not throw an error when it encounters a custom element.

Now you can start using Lynk components in your app!

Types

Once you have configured your application for custom elements, you should be able to use Lynk in your application without it causing any errors. Unfortunately, this doesn’t register the custom elements to behave like components built using Vue. To provide autocomplete information and type safety for your components, you can import the Lynk Vue types into your tsconfig.json to get better integration in your standard Vue and JSX templates.

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "types": ["@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/types/vue"]
  }
}

Usage

QR code generator example

<template>
  <div class="container">
    <h1>QR code generator</h1>

    <lynk-input maxlength="255" clearable label="Value" v-model="qrCode"></lynk-input>

    <lynk-qr-code :value="qrCode"></lynk-qr-code>
  </div>
</template>

<script setup>
  import { ref } from 'vue';
  import '@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/components/qr-code/qr-code.js';
  import '@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/components/input/input.js';

  const qrCode = ref();
</script>

<style>
  .container {
    max-width: 400px;
    margin: 0 auto;
  }

  lynk-input {
    margin: var(--lynk-spacing-large) 0;
  }
</style>

Binding Complex Data

When binding complex data such as objects and arrays, use the .prop modifier to make Vue bind them as a property instead of an attribute.

<lynk-color-picker :swatches.prop="mySwatches" />

Two-way Binding

One caveat is there’s currently no support for v-model on custom elements, but you can still achieve two-way binding manually.

<!-- ❌ This doesn't work -->
<lynk-input v-model="name"></lynk-input>
<!-- ✅ This works, but it's a bit longer -->
<lynk-input :value="name" @input="name = $event.target.value"></lynk-input>

If that’s too verbose for your liking, you can import the custom directive utility instead. which adds a custom directive l-model that will work just like v-model but for Lynk components.

// main.js or main.ts
import VueBindingDirective from from '@uplynk/lynk-design/dist/utilities/vue-binding-directive'

const app = createApp(App);

// Register the custom directive globally
app.use(VueBindingDirective);

Slots

Slots in Lynk/web components are functionally the same as basic slots in Vue. Slots can be assigned to elements using the slot attribute followed by the name of the slot it is being assigned to.

Here is an example:

<lynk-drawer label="Drawer" placement="start" class="drawer-placement-start" :open="drawerIsOpen">
  This drawer slides in from the start.
  <div slot="footer">
    <lynk-button variant="primary" @click=" drawerIsOpen = false">Close</lynk-button>
  </div>
</lynk-drawer>