Nuxt's asyncData comes at a cost: the embedded __NUXT__
payload.
What if you could render some markup on the server and not hydrate it on the client? You'd get a dead component: unable to properly update (re-render) on the client-side following data updates. Even worse: you'd get a node mismatch error, since the client wouldn't have the actual data to rerender it.
Sometimes though, a dead component is exactly what you need: say you're just fetching data on the server to render some content, but won't ever update this fragment on the client-side.
nuxt-static-render
gives you that functionality with some caveats.
Install with:
npm install nuxt-static-render --save
Add to your Nuxt project via modules
:
export default {
modules: ['nuxt-static-render']
}
Simply wrap your dead markup fragments in <nuxt-static-render>
anywhere
on the page, as many times as needed.
Use $staticData
to access the static rendering data. It is automatically
populated on the server by the serverData()
handler, which you can add to
any Nuxt page. From the included example:
<template>
<div class="wrapper">
<nuxt-static-render class="top">
<div>{{ $staticData.foobar }}</div>
</nuxt-static-render>
<div class="bottom" @click="counter++">
<div>
<p>This component should remain operational.<p>
<p>Here's a counter: {{ counter }}. Click to increment.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
serverData() {
return {
foobar: 'This should not be in __NUXT__'
}
},
asyncData() {
return {
counter: 1
}
}
}
</script>
The top
div, rendered with <nuxt-static-render>
should have markup based
on $staticData.foobar
, which is only populated on the server and is not
added to the __NUXT__
payload. That means this data will only be used on the
server to render markup and immediately discarded.
Why not call it $serverData
instead of $staticData
? Because it's static data populated via the serverData()
function. The same data object ($staticData
) can also be populated via clientData()
, so it made more sense to use $staticData
for the data object.
If you tried to do this:
<nuxt-static-render class="top">
<div>{{ $staticData.obj.foobar }}</div>
</nuxt-static-render>
It would result in the following error:
Because in the first template compiler run, obj
does not exist yet. In this implementation, data for static rendering must be readily available in $staticData
. If you know how to circumvent this limitation, let me know. Yes, I tried v-once
but it appears to requires hydration data to be available on the client-side for at least one render. cc @yyx990803 :)
Say you have a huge chunk of markup that needs to be server-rendered for SEO,
but you don't want a massive __NUXT__
payload to go with it. Still, once that
markup is rendered on the client, you have bits of it that need hydration
so they can continue to be updated on the client. For this specific case, you
can provide clientData()
:
export default {
serverData() {
// This is used to instantly render the fragments
// on the server and deliver ready-for-display markup
return {
foobar: 'This should not be in __NUXT__'
}
},
clientData() {
// This is loaded asynchronously post-mount, i.e.,
// server-side content is immediately displayed while
// the page silently hydrates and gets ready for
// further dynamic updates on the client
return {
foobar: 'This should not be in __NUXT__'
}
}
}
In this usage, you can also define:
export default {
clientDataLoaded(data) {
}
}
As a way of knowing when the data has been fully hydrated on the client.
Use this feature only if you absolutely must avoid
__NUXT__
-based hydration due to exceptionally large content.
To Markus Oberlehner for vue-lazy-hydration, which served
as inspiration for this module. The asyncFactory
render()
hack is mainly
what makes this possible at all.