# Misc
# name
Type:
stringDetails:
Allow the component to recursively invoke itself in its template. Note that when a component is registered globally with
app.component, the global ID is automatically set as its name.Another benefit of specifying a
nameoption is debugging. Named components result in more helpful warning messages. Also, when inspecting an app in the vue-devtools (opens new window), unnamed components will show up as<AnonymousComponent>, which isn't very informative. By providing thenameoption, you will get a much more informative component tree.
# delimiters
Type:
Array<string>Default:
['{{', '}}']Restrictions: This option is only available in the full build, with in-browser template compilation.
Details:
Sets the delimiters used for text interpolation within the template.
Typically this is used to avoid conflicting with server-side frameworks that also use mustache syntax.
Example:
createApp({ // Delimiters changed to ES6 template string style delimiters: ['${', '}'] })1
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# inheritAttrs
Type:
booleanDefault:
trueDetails:
By default, parent scope attribute bindings that are not recognized as props will "fallthrough". This means that when we have a single-root component, these bindings will be applied to the root element of the child component as normal HTML attributes. When authoring a component that wraps a target element or another component, this may not always be the desired behavior. By setting
inheritAttrstofalse, this default behavior can be disabled. The attributes are available via the$attrsinstance property and can be explicitly bound to a non-root element usingv-bind.Usage:
app.component('base-input', { inheritAttrs: false, props: ['label', 'value'], emits: ['input'], template: ` <label> {{ label }} <input v-bind="$attrs" v-bind:value="value" v-on:input="$emit('input', $event.target.value)" > </label> ` })1
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15See also: Disabling Attribute Inheritance