Question
I'm starting out a new vue.js project so I used the vue-cli tool to scaffold
out a new webpack project (i.e. vue init webpack
).
As I was walking through the generated files I noticed the following imports
in the src/router/index.js
file:
import Vue from 'vue'
import Router from 'vue-router'
import Hello from '@/components/Hello' // <- this one is what my qusestion is about
Vue.use(Router)
export default new Router({
routes: [
{
path: '/',
name: 'Hello',
component: Hello
}
]
})
I've not seen the at sign (@
) in a path before. I suspect it allows for
relative paths (maybe?) but I wanted to be sure I understand what it truly
does.
I tried searching around online but wasn't able to find an explanation (prob
because searching for "at sign" or using the literal character @
doesn't
help as search criteria).
What does the @
do in this path (link to documentation would be fantastic)
and is this an es6 thing? A webpack thing? A vue-loader thing?
UPDATE
Thanks Felix Kling for pointing me to another duplicate stackoverflow question/answer about this same question.
While the comment on the other stackoverflow post isn't the exact answer to this question (it wasn't a babel plugin in my case) it did point me in the correct direction to find what it was.
In in the scaffolding that vue-cli cranks out for you, part of the base webpack config sets up an alias for .vue files:
This makes sense both in the fact that it gives you a relative path from the
src file and it removes the requirement of the .vue
at the end of the
import path (which you normally need).
Thanks for the help!
Answer
This is done with Webpack
resolve.alias
configuration option and isn't specific to Vue.
In Vue Webpack template, Webpack
is configured to replace @/
with [src
path](https://github.com/vuejs-
templates/webpack/blob/9992f5a058c53f32b03d9a8743612188c04698af/template/build/webpack.base.conf.js#L27):
const path = require('path');
...
resolve: {
extensions: ['.js', '.vue', '.json'],
alias: {
...
'@': path.resolve('src'),
}
},
...
The alias is used as:
import '@/<path inside src folder>';