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Fallthrough Attributes
This page assumes you've already read the Components Basics. Read that first if you are new to components.
Attribute Inheritance
A "fallthrough attribute" is an attribute or v-on
event listener that is passed to a component, but is not explicitly declared in the receiving component's props or emits. Common examples of this include class
, style
, and id
attributes.
When a component renders a single root element, fallthrough attributes will be automatically added to the root element's attributes. For example, given a <MyButton>
component with the following template:
template
<!-- template of <MyButton> -->
<button>Click Me</button>
And a parent using this component with:
template
<MyButton class="large" />
The final rendered DOM would be:
html
<button class="large">Click Me</button>
Here, <MyButton>
did not declare class
as an accepted prop. Therefore, class
is treated as a fallthrough attribute and automatically added to <MyButton>
's root element.
class
and style
Merging
If the child component's root element already has existing class
or style
attributes, it will be merged with the class
and style
values that are inherited from the parent. Suppose we change the template of <MyButton>
in the previous example to:
template
<!-- template of <MyButton> -->
<button class="btn">Click Me</button>
Then the final rendered DOM would now become:
html
<button class="btn large">Click Me</button>
v-on
Listener Inheritance
The same rule applies to v-on
event listeners:
template
<MyButton @click="onClick" />
The click
listener will be added to the root element of <MyButton>
, i.e. the native <button>
element. When the native <button>
is clicked, it will trigger the onClick
method of the parent component. If the native <button>
already has a click
listener bound with v-on
, then both listeners will trigger.
Nested Component Inheritance
If a component renders another component as its root node, for example, we refactored <MyButton>
to render a <BaseButton>
as its root:
template
<!-- template of <MyButton/> that simply renders another component -->
<BaseButton />
Then the fallthrough attributes received by <MyButton>
will be automatically forwarded to <BaseButton>
.
Note that:
Forwarded attributes do not include any attributes that are declared as props, or
v-on
listeners of declared events by<MyButton>
- in other words, the declared props and listeners have been "consumed" by<MyButton>
.Forwarded attributes may be accepted as props by
<BaseButton>
, if declared by it.
Disabling Attribute Inheritance
If you do not want a component to automatically inherit attributes, you can set inheritAttrs: false
in the component's options.
Since 3.3 you can also use defineOptions
directly in <script setup>
:
vue
<script setup>
defineOptions({
inheritAttrs: false
})
// ...setup logic
</script>
The common scenario for disabling attribute inheritance is when attributes need to be applied to other elements besides the root node. By setting the inheritAttrs
option to false
, you can take full control over where the fallthrough attributes should be applied.
These fallthrough attributes can be accessed directly in template expressions as $attrs
:
template
<span>Fallthrough attributes: {{ $attrs }}</span>
The $attrs
object includes all attributes that are not declared by the component's props
or emits
options (e.g., class
, style
, v-on
listeners, etc.).
Some notes:
Unlike props, fallthrough attributes preserve their original casing in JavaScript, so an attribute like
foo-bar
needs to be accessed as$attrs['foo-bar']
.A
v-on
event listener like@click
will be exposed on the object as a function under$attrs.onClick
.
Using our <MyButton>
component example from the previous section - sometimes we may need to wrap the actual <button>
element with an extra <div>
for styling purposes:
template
<div class="btn-wrapper">
<button class="btn">Click Me</button>
</div>
We want all fallthrough attributes like class
and v-on
listeners to be applied to the inner <button>
, not the outer <div>
. We can achieve this with inheritAttrs: false
and v-bind="$attrs"
:
template
<div class="btn-wrapper">
<button class="btn" v-bind="$attrs">Click Me</button>
</div>
Remember that v-bind
without an argument binds all the properties of an object as attributes of the target element.
Attribute Inheritance on Multiple Root Nodes
Unlike components with a single root node, components with multiple root nodes do not have an automatic attribute fallthrough behavior. If $attrs
are not bound explicitly, a runtime warning will be issued.
template
<CustomLayout id="custom-layout" @click="changeValue" />
If <CustomLayout>
has the following multi-root template, there will be a warning because Vue cannot be sure where to apply the fallthrough attributes:
template
<header>...</header>
<main>...</main>
<footer>...</footer>
The warning will be suppressed if $attrs
is explicitly bound:
template
<header>...</header>
<main v-bind="$attrs">...</main>
<footer>...</footer>
Accessing Fallthrough Attributes in JavaScript
If needed, you can access a component's fallthrough attributes in <script setup>
using the useAttrs()
API:
vue
<script setup>
import { useAttrs } from 'vue'
const attrs = useAttrs()
</script>
If not using <script setup>
, attrs
will be exposed as a property of the setup()
context:
js
export default {
setup(props, ctx) {
// fallthrough attributes are exposed as ctx.attrs
console.log(ctx.attrs)
}
}
Note that although the attrs
object here always reflects the latest fallthrough attributes, it isn't reactive (for performance reasons). You cannot use watchers to observe its changes. If you need reactivity, use a prop. Alternatively, you can use onUpdated()
to perform side effects with the latest attrs
on each update.