nodecg-vue-composable v1.1.0
nodecg-vue-composable
A set of Vue composables for interacting more predictably with NodeCG replicants.
Works with Vue 2 & Vue 3 thanks to vue-demi.
useReplicant is a happy medium between manually syncing a vue reactive value with a nodecg replicant on every change and not using reactivity at all. It forces you to be explicit about when a replicant should be updated while still providing reactivity for easy v-model binding.
Usage
Note: use of composables requires the Vue Composition API, either importing it directly from Vue 3 or using the @vue/composition-api package with Vue 2. You are also required to create components using defineComponent.
useReplicant(name, namespace, opts)
A (sort-of) two-way binding that keeps a separate copy of the latest replicant value locally which you're free to modify. Doesn't update the replicant itself until you explicitly tell it to.
Returns an object with the following properties:
data: arefthat stores the current local valuechanged: arefbool indicating if the local value is different to the replicant valueupToDate: arefbool indicating if the replicant has been updated since the local copy was first changed (i.e. if true, saving will overwrite a change from elsewhere)save(): a function to commit the locally current value to the replicantrevert(): a function to setdatato the replicant value (clearing local changes)loadDefault(): a function to reset the local value to the default value of the replicantoldData: a readonlyrefof the latest replicant value
Update the value (data) programatically or in a template binding and commit it with save().
If the local value is out of sync when a new value comes in from the replicant, it won't update (indicated by upToDate). If it's unchanged however, data will be updated and propagate to your bindings.
Example
<template>
<div>
<input v-model="lowerThird.data" />
<button :disabled="!lowerThird.changed" @click="lowerThird.save()">
SAVE
</button>
<button :disabled="!lowerThird.changed" @click="lowerThird.revert()">
REVERT CHANGES
</button>
<button @click="lowerThird.loadDefault()">
CLEAR
</button>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import { defineComponent } from 'vue' // or '@vue/composition-api' with vue 2
import { useReplicant } from 'nodecg-vue-composable'
export default defineComponent({
setup() {
const lowerThird = useReplicant('lowerThird', { defaultValue: '' })
return {
lowerThird
}
}
})
</script>
<template>useAssetReplicant(name)
A read-only binding to an asset replicant with the name assets:<name>.
Example
<template>
<div>
<select v-model="logo.data">
<option disabled value="">Select a logo...</option>
<option v-for="logoAsset in logos" :value="logoAsset.url">
{{ logoAsset.name }}
</option>
</select>
<button :disabled="!logo.changed" @click="logo.save()">
SAVE
</button>
<button :disabled="!logo.changed" @click="logo.revert()">
REVERT CHANGES
</button>
<button @click="logo.loadDefault()">
CLEAR
</button>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import { defineComponent } from 'vue' // or '@vue/composition-api' with vue 2
import { useReplicant, useAssetReplicant } from 'nodecg-vue-composable'
export default defineComponent({
setup() {
const logo = useReplicant('logo', { defaultValue: null })
const logos = useAssetReplicant('logos')
return {
logo,
logos
}
}
})
</script>
<template>useDynamicReplicant(name, namespace, opts)
If you want to use a name that is itself reactive use a useDynamicReplicant (name suggestions welcome).
Only usage difference with useReplicant is that it returns a ref that wraps the reactive, so if you want to use it inside the setup function or another composable you need to access the value before data. Usage inside the template is unaffected as the unwrapping will be done for you.
I.e. instead of:
const rep = useReplicant('repName')
rep.data = '....'You need to do:
const repName = toRef(props, 'repName') // example reactive name
const rep = useDynamicReplicant(repName)
rep.value.data = '....'Installation
Vue 3
npm install -D nodecg-vue-composable
Vue 2
npm install -D @vue/composition-api nodecg-vue-composable
Setup @vue/composition-api by adding the following to your entry file:
import VueCompositionApi from '@vue/composition-api'
Vue.use(VueCompositionApi)Todo
Add TypeScript typings- Write some tests
Come up with a better name for DynamicReactiveReplicant