430

I'm starting out a new vue.js project so I used the vue-cli tool to scaffold out a new webpack project (i.e. vue init webpack).

As I was walking through the generated files I noticed the following imports in the src/router/index.js file:

import Vue from 'vue'
import Router from 'vue-router'
import Hello from '@/components/Hello' // <- this one is what my qusestion is about

Vue.use(Router)

export default new Router({
    routes: [
        {
            path: '/',
            name: 'Hello',
            component: Hello
        }
    ]
})

I've not seen the at sign (@) in a path before. I suspect it allows for relative paths (maybe?) but I wanted to be sure I understand what it truly does.

I tried searching around online but wasn't able to find an explanation (prob because searching for "at sign" or using the literal character @ doesn't help as search criteria).

What does the @ do in this path (link to documentation would be fantastic) and is this an es6 thing? A webpack thing? A vue-loader thing?

UPDATE

Thanks Felix Kling for pointing me to another duplicate stackoverflow question/answer about this same question.

While the comment on the other stackoverflow post isn't the exact answer to this question (it wasn't a babel plugin in my case) it did point me in the correct direction to find what it was.

In in the scaffolding that vue-cli cranks out for you, part of the base webpack config sets up an alias for .vue files:

Alias location within project

This makes sense both in the fact that it gives you a relative path from the src file and it removes the requirement of the .vue at the end of the import path (which you normally need).

Thanks for the help!

9
  • 4
    See my comment. Mar 12, 2017 at 16:47
  • 4
    @FelixKling It is not an exact duplicate because it doesn't answer the whole question, is this an es6 thing? A webpack thing? A vue-loader thing? Mar 12, 2017 at 16:52
  • 1
    Yeah, I think the question was similar but not a duplicate. Regardless I figured out where it was coming from and updated the question with an explanation since I can't add it as an answer. Mar 12, 2017 at 16:56
  • 1
    @estus: the answer makes it pretty clear that it isn't part of ES6 but a webpack configuration thing, don't you think? And that's exactly the case here as well, only that the nature of the configuration is a bit different. Mar 12, 2017 at 17:05
  • 1
    @FelixKling It depends. But since the question you've linked doesn't have detailed answer that explains what's up with Webpack, it may probably deserve an answer. Usually having 'Possible duplicate of ...' comment is enough to designate the link between the questions, and vox populi does the rest. I've seen the questions being over-duped on SO too often. Mar 12, 2017 at 17:40

13 Answers 13

376

This is done with Webpack resolve.alias configuration option and isn't specific to Vue.

In Vue Webpack template, Webpack is configured to replace @/ with src path:

  const path = require('path');

  ...
  resolve: {
    extensions: ['.js', '.vue', '.json'],
    alias: {
      ...
      '@': path.resolve('src'),
    }
  },
  ...

The alias is used as:

import '@/<path inside src folder>';
22
  • 259
    JavaScript just isn't JavaScript anymore. Babel/webpack gives us this Frankenstein language and somehow new developers are meant to know where ECMAScript spec ends and userland plugins/transforms begin. It's really sad, imo.
    – Mulan
    Mar 13, 2017 at 4:13
  • 3
    @naomik It's up to user to introduce such tricks into the setup or not. It's not a big deal for Vue since it relies on its custom .vue file format anyway. Mar 13, 2017 at 10:58
  • 29
    Personally I think the ability to add flexibility if you want it is a good thing. I see it less as frankenstein and more like voltron; you can do stuff as a lion or combine different lions together to have a bigger robot. Yeah, sometimes you get questions like this one, but it's not like the answers can't be found. Really, you can take the frankenstein or voltron view with any project of any size, it's just "using and understanding dependencies". Mar 13, 2017 at 14:39
  • 1
    @ChrisSchmitz It depends on the context and the perspective. Doing something like this will restrict the project to use Webpack. May be not a good thing if the project intends to use native ES6 modules when they will arrive, or it's Node where CommonJS can be used for modules. Long relative paths can be harder to maintain and refactor, on the other hand. Mar 13, 2017 at 14:49
  • 8
    When using vue-cli v3+ you should use ~@ to reference src folder. E.g.: $font-path: '~@/assets/fonts/'; Jan 25, 2019 at 23:18
36

Also keep in mind you can create variables in tsconfig as well:

"paths": {
  "@components": ["src/components"],
  "@scss": ["src/styles/scss"],
  "@img": ["src/assests/images"],
  "@": ["src"],
}

This can be utilized for naming convention purposes:

import { componentHeader } from '@components/header';
3
  • But this kind of alias will be left bare in the source JS and then at run-time you'll need to have a wrapper intercede to make the alias work. Maybe there's a way via babel for this TS syntax to get converted at build time? With Typescript's tsc is does not and therefore you'll need something like module-alias or tsconfig-paths.
    – ken
    May 27, 2020 at 22:55
  • 1
    after I add this settings, vs code can not reslove path and cannot go into the file when click the impored module. Oct 16, 2021 at 7:19
  • In what file do I usually need to define the "paths" Object ?
    – user20984971
    Apr 10 at 18:57
5

I get over with following combination

import HelloWorld from '@/components/HelloWorld'
=>
import HelloWorld from 'src/components/HelloWorld'

IDE will stop warning the uri, but this causes invalid uri when compile, in "build\webpack.base.conf.js"

resolve: {
  extensions: ['.js', '.vue', '.json'],
  alias: {
    'src': resolve('src'),
  }
},

Bingoo!

3

Maybe try adding in webpack. mix.webpackConfig references laravel mix.

mix.webpackConfig({

    resolve: {
        alias: {
            '@imgSrc': path.resolve('resources/assets/img')
        }
    }
});

And then in vue use.

<img src="@imgSrc/logo.png" />
2

resolve('src') no works for me but path.resolve('src') works

resolve: {
    alias: {
      'vue$': 'vue/dist/vue.esm.js',
      '@': path.resolve('src')
    },
    extensions: ['*', '.js', '.vue', '.json']
  },
1

Something must have changed. The answer given here is no longer correct. This project in Chapter09 uses the @ sign in its import statements but the webpack.config.js file doesn't have a path resolve statement:

let service = process.VUE_CLI_SERVICE

if (!service || process.env.VUE_CLI_API_MODE) {
  const Service = require('./lib/Service')
  service = new Service(process.env.VUE_CLI_CONTEXT || process.cwd())
  service.init(process.env.VUE_CLI_MODE || process.env.NODE_ENV)
}

module.exports = service.resolveWebpackConfig()
1

A similar approach used in Vue3 and Vite, the alias can be found in vite.config.js

// https://vitejs.dev/config/
export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [vue(),vueJsx()],
  resolve: {
    alias: {
      "@": fileURLToPath(new URL("./src", import.meta.url)),
    },
  },
});
0

An example to apply in Next.js would be to use the file next.config.js to add the next content.

const path = require('path');

module.exports = {
  webpack: (config, options) => {
    config.resolve.alias = {
      '@': path.resolve(process.cwd(), 'src'),
    };
    return config;
  }
};
0

It refers to an alias path found in your config.js file

1
  • 2
    Hey @jocoio, thanks for hopping in and adding an answer. It's always awesome to see new contributors looking to help! A bit of help from my end: your answer is correct, but to be more helpful for people who come across it you could provide more explanation and context. Check out the other answers to the question here. there are lots of great examples to go by. Thanks again for chipping in 🙌🏽 Dec 9, 2022 at 2:04
0

@ refers to the src folder inside your root directory, it can be configured while bootstrapping your app.

0

We sometimes use '@' to import from a components directory with a path "src/components/Add.vue". If we need to access this file from a diff directory like "src/views/AboutView.vue", we can use this to import Add.vue inside AboutView.vue as import Add from "@/components/Add.vue", inside your tag. This is the same as using import Add from "../components/Add.vue" '@' points to the root directory of your app(src folder)

1
  • I t should read, '@' refers to the 'src' folder in your root dir. Apr 3 at 6:11
0

In simple words, the "@" symbol is used as "src" when importing files/components.

I have configured my webpack.common.js file like below

resolve: {
  extensions: [".ts", ".js", ".vue"],
  alias: {
      '@': path.resolve(__dirname,'src/')
  }
}

I have imported the vuex store like this import store from "@/store"; instead of import store from "../store"

You can read more about Webpack Aliases in Vue here

-3

import { createApp, markRaw } from "vue";

import { createPinia } from "pinia";

import App from "./App.vue";

import router from "./router";

// import "./assets/main.css";

const app = createApp(App);

const pinia = createPinia()

pinia.use(({ store })=>{ store.$router = markRaw(router) })

app.use(pinia);

app.use(router);

app.mount("#app");

1
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Feb 8 at 14:45

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