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Quick Start

  • To quickly get a taste of Vue, you can try it directly in our Playground.

  • If you prefer a plain HTML setup without any build steps, you can use this JSFiddle as your starting point.

  • If you are already familiar with Node.js and the concept of build tools, you can also try a complete build setup right within your browser on StackBlitz.

In this section we will introduce how to scaffold a Vue Single Page Application on your local machine. The created project will be using a build setup based on Vite and allow us to use Vue Single-File Components (SFCs).

Make sure you have an up-to-date version of Node.js installed and your current working directory is the one where you intend to create a project. Run the following command in your command line (without the $ sign):

Terminal window
npm create vue@latest

This command will install and execute create-vue, the official Vue project scaffolding tool. You will be presented with prompts for several optional features such as TypeScript and testing support:

Terminal window
Project name: <your-project-name>
Add TypeScript? No / Yes
Add JSX Support? No / Yes
Add Vue Router for Single Page Application development? No / Yes
Add Pinia for state management? No / Yes
Add Vitest for Unit testing? No / Yes
Add an End-to-End Testing Solution? No / Cypress / Nightwatch / Playwright
Add ESLint for code quality? No / Yes
Add Prettier for code formatting? No / Yes
Add Vue DevTools 7 extension for debugging? (experimental) … No / Yes
Scaffolding project in ./<your-project-name>...
Done.

If you are unsure about an option, simply choose No by hitting enter for now. Once the project is created, follow the instructions to install dependencies and start the dev server:

Terminal window
cd <your-project-name>
npm install
npm run dev

You should now have your first Vue project running! Note that the example components in the generated project are written using the Composition API and <script setup>, rather than the Options API. Here are some additional tips:

When you are ready to ship your app to production, run the following:

sh npm run build

This will create a production-ready build of your app in the project’s ./dist directory. Check out the Production Deployment Guide to learn more about shipping your app to production.

   

Next Steps >

You can use Vue directly from a CDN via a script tag:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/vue@3/dist/vue.global.js"></script>

Here we are using unpkg, but you can also use any CDN that serves npm packages, for example jsdelivr or cdnjs. Of course, you can also download this file and serve it yourself.

When using Vue from a CDN, there is no “build step” involved. This makes the setup a lot simpler, and is suitable for enhancing static HTML or integrating with a backend framework. However, you won’t be able to use the Single-File Component (SFC) syntax.

The above link loads the global build of Vue, where all top-level APIs are exposed as properties on the global Vue object. Here is a full example using the global build:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/vue@3/dist/vue.global.js"></script>
<div id="app">{{ message }}</div>
<script>
const { createApp, ref } = Vue;
createApp({
setup() {
const message = ref("Hello vue!");
return {
message,
};
},
}).mount("#app");
</script>

CodePen Demo >

Throughout the rest of the documentation, we will be primarily using ES modules syntax. Most modern browsers now support ES modules natively, so we can use Vue from a CDN via native ES modules like this:

<div id="app">{{ message }}</div>
<script type="module">
import {
createApp,
ref,
} from "https://unpkg.com/vue@3/dist/vue.esm-browser.js";
createApp({
setup() {
const message = ref("Hello Vue!");
return {
message,
};
},
}).mount("#app");
</script>

Notice that we are using <script type="module">, and the imported CDN URL is pointing to the ES modules build of Vue instead.

CodePen Demo >

In the above example, we are importing from the full CDN URL, but in the rest of the documentation you will see code like this:

import { createApp } from "vue";

We can teach the browser where to locate the vue import by using Import Maps:

<script type="importmap">
{
"imports": {
"vue": "https://unpkg.com/vue@3/dist/vue.esm-browser.js"
}
}
</script>
<div id="app">{{ message }}</div>
<script type="module">
import { createApp, ref } from "vue";
createApp({
setup() {
const message = ref("Hello Vue!");
return {
message,
};
},
}).mount("#app");
</script>

CodePen Demo >

 

You can also add entries for other dependencies to the import map - but make sure they point to the ES modules version of the library you intend to use.

As we dive deeper into the guide, we may need to split our code into separate JavaScript files so that they are easier to manage. For example:

index.html
<div id="app"></div>
<script type="module">
import { createApp } from "vue";
import MyComponent from "./my-component.js";
createApp(MyComponent).mount("#app");
</script>
my-component.js
import { ref } from "vue";
export default {
setup() {
const count = ref(0);
return { count };
},
template: `<div>Count is: {{ count }}</div>`,
};

If you directly open the above index.html in your browser, you will find that it throws an error because ES modules cannot work over the file:// protocol, which is the protocol the browser uses when you open a local file.

Due to security reasons, ES modules can only work over the http:// protocol, which is what the browsers use when opening pages on the web. In order for ES modules to work on our local machine, we need to serve the index.html over the http:// protocol, with a local HTTP server.

To start a local HTTP server, first make sure you have Node.js installed, then run npx serve from the command line in the same directory where your HTML file is. You can also use any other HTTP server that can serve static files with the correct MIME types.

You may have noticed that the imported component’s template is inlined as a JavaScript string. If you are using VS Code, you can install the es6-string-html extension and prefix the strings with a /*html*/ comment to get syntax highlighting for them.

If you skipped the Introduction, we strongly recommend reading it before moving on to the rest of the documentation