33

Is there a way to apply a filter to the slot content in a Vue component?

To clarify, I would like to truncate the text included manually in the HTML. For example I would like to transform this:

<!-- In the view -->
<my-component>
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Cumque, 
laboriosam quasi rerum obcaecati dignissimos autem laudantium error 
quas voluptatibus debitis?
</my-component>

into this:

<!-- Generated component -->
<div>
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing ...
</div

I can't seem to find this information in the documentation.

Thank you.

0

7 Answers 7

41

The same thing on similar way can be:

in your main.js file:

var filter = function(text, length, clamp){
    clamp = clamp || '...';
    var node = document.createElement('div');
    node.innerHTML = text;
    var content = node.textContent;
    return content.length > length ? content.slice(0, length) + clamp : content;
};

Vue.filter('truncate', filter);

in your template:

{{data.content | truncate(300, '...')}}
2
  • This exact code is also available via NPM package here npmjs.com/package/vue-truncate
    – Bryan
    Dec 14, 2018 at 17:09
  • 1
    Why adding to a div node just to grab the textContent afterwards? It actually works without this dance too.
    – dferrazm
    Mar 18, 2021 at 13:12
27

You can use a filter to truncate it.

//credit to @Bill Criswell for this filter
Vue.filter('truncate', function (text, stop, clamp) {
    return text.slice(0, stop) + (stop < text.length ? clamp || '...' : '')
})

Then give the filter the length you want the string to be

<my-component>
    {{'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing' | truncate(50) }}
</my-component>

Within the child component, content from a slot is passed through as-is, and isn't available as a variable that you could truncate from the child end.

5
  • Very similar to the answer I was going to suggest. Is there a reason why you're wrapping it up in a div though? Did this quick test case and it works well: jsfiddle.net/crswll/q3L78cst Jan 29, 2016 at 11:46
  • No reason at all, I grabbed the filter from a quick Google. Figured someone had already done the work on a truncate filter. Updated the answer with your much simpler version.
    – Jeff
    Jan 29, 2016 at 22:50
  • 9
    {{ data | truncate(50) }} Oct 19, 2017 at 17:43
  • how can I use this filter with v-model? (in vuejs 2) Jul 27, 2018 at 7:17
  • @Jeff Maybe you can help me. Look at this : stackoverflow.com/questions/52584451/…
    – moses toh
    Oct 1, 2018 at 8:00
23

A small fix to @community answer:

Within component:

export default {
    data: () => {
        return {}
    },
    created() {
    },
    filters: {
        truncate: function (text, length, suffix) {
            if (text.length > length) {
                return text.substring(0, length) + suffix;
            } else {
                return text;
            }
        },
    }
}

or globally:

/** Vue Filters Start */
Vue.filter('truncate', function (text, length, suffix) {
    if (text.length > length) {
        return text.substring(0, length) + suffix;
    } else {
        return text;
    }
});
/** Vue Filters End */

It still can be used the same way:

<div id="app">
  <span>{{ text | truncate(10, '...') }}</span>
</div>
12

you can also do it like this:

export default {
    data: () => {
      return { 
      }
    },
    created(){
    },
    filters: {
        truncate: function (text, length, suffix) {
            if (text.length > length) {
                return text.substring(0, length) + suffix;
            } else {
                return text;
            }
        },
    }
}

or

Vue.filter('truncate', function (text, length, suffix) {
    if (text.length > length) {
        return text.substring(0, length) + suffix;
    } else {
        return text;
    }
});

then use it like this:

<div id="app">
  <span>{{ text | truncate(10, '...') }}</span>
</div>

If you want to know more vue filters, I suggest you read this: How to Create Filters in Vue.js with Examples

0
7

You can just use slice js method indicating begin and end positions of the string. More info

<my-component>{{ lorem.slice(0, 180) }}...</my-component>

<script>
export default {
  data() {
    return {
      lorem:
        "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, mel at clita quando. Te sit oratio vituperatoribus, nam ad ipsum posidonium mediocritatem, explicari dissentiunt cu mea. Repudiare disputationi vim in, mollis iriure nec cu, alienum argumentum ius ad. Pri eu justo aeque torquatos."
    };
  }
};
</script>
2
  • this is good, but not the best solution as it'll just slice the string. The resulting string will not let you know that there's more info. it would be advisable to add '...' to let the user know the string has been truncated
    – tngeene
    Mar 11, 2021 at 7:03
  • never mind. Just seen you added the '...' after the slice. Awesome.
    – tngeene
    Mar 11, 2021 at 7:05
7

For nuxt applications this worked for me :

 <div v-html="$options.filters.truncate(post.body)"></div>

And this is my Filter

 filters: {
    truncate: function (text, length) {
      if (text.length > 30) {
        return text.substring(0, 30) + '...'
      } else {
        return text
      }
    },
  },
0
1

You can achieve your goal by using a custom Vue component that accepts the slot content and applies a text truncation filter. The advantage of this approach is that 'text-clipper'can parse the HTML which means that you can pass any component that renders html or even html with v-html or also just normal text

For example:

<template>
  <div>
    <slot></slot>
    <span>{{ truncatedText }}</span>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import clipper from 'text-clipper';

export default {
  name: 'TruncateText',
  props: {
    maxLength: {
      type: Number,
      default: 50,
    },
  },
  computed: {
    truncatedText() {
      const content = this.$slots.default[0].text;
      return clipper(content, this.maxLength, { html: true });
    },
  },
};
</script>

and then use it like this:

<template>
  <div>
    <TruncateText :maxLength="50">
      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Cumque, laboriosam quasi rerum obcaecati dignissimos autem laudantium error quas voluptatibus debitis?
    </TruncateText>
  </div>

you can have a look at the implementation I did in a similar plugin I created https://github.com/EranGrin/vue-read-more-truncate

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