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I'm having trouble figuring out how to have multiple pages in a Vue CLI project. Right now I have my home page with a few components and I want to create another page but I do not know how to do that. Am I supposed to create multiple html files where the index.html by default is? In a simple file structure with css js img folder and html files as pages I know that creating another html file means making another page. But I don't understand how this works with Vue CLI project.

I saw stuff like vue-router and "pages" in Vue documentation but I do not understand them very well. What are my alternatives? Is there a guide that explains that in detail, because I wasn't able to find any, let alone detailed. Would be very happy if you could help! Thank you!

4 Answers 4

133

First: always read the official documentation. With Vue you can build a SPA, and a MPA is also no problem. Just follow the guides:

You should create a new project with Vue CLI 3. Once you've created your project set it to be manually configured. Make sure you don't choose the SPA option. Vue will then create a nice "start" project using a MPA approach. After that, just repeat the config on vue.config.js.


Updated #1

It seems that some updates on Vue Cli, have changed the way to build a MPA app, so:

  • Create a new application vue create test
  • Choose Manual configuration

The boilerplate created will be for a SPA. So make the following changes:

  • Create a folder under src named pages (optional)

  • Into this folder create your own pages: Home, About, etc.

  • Copy and paste the App.vue and main.js from src, into your new folders - Home, etc.

  • Format the App.vue into this folders, to your liking.

  • Create a vue.config.js and set it like this: https://cli.vuejs.org/config/#pages

Below, I have three images demonstrating this:

  • First: a fresh new app
  • Second: this same app, with the changes I made above
  • Third: the vue.config.js from this app

fresh new app this same app, with the changes I made above the vue.config.js from this app

You don't need to create the pages folder, this is just to get the idea.

Link to GitHub: Building a MPA App

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  • 7
    Best solution yet, altough i couldn't find a more detailed tutorial of multi pages Oct 10, 2018 at 14:44
  • 4
    set to manually configure it. Then, don't choose the SPA option. Vue will create a nice "start" project using a MPA approach. This is not correct, I tried using Vue CLI 3.4.0, I chose manual, there is no option to choose/not choose SPA. Vue CLI will generate a standard boilerplate project using SPA approach. Feb 7, 2019 at 3:58
  • 1
    It seems they have changed it. Anyway, you need to follow the example on here: cli.vuejs.org/config/#pages. Also: don't select "Route" option when opt for manually configure it Feb 8, 2019 at 12:16
  • 9
    This should be the accepted answer.. so far it's working fine on Vue CLI 3.4.0, should be noted Vue CLI doesn't watch changes in your vue.config.js so if you want to see the new settings that you have changed you have to npm run serve again. Feb 12, 2019 at 5:53
  • 1
    They are still a same app. The node_modules and any component you build, can be shared between them, just by import - at same way you do with a SPA. I doesn't get what you mean by "without uploading to npm". Aug 26, 2019 at 19:10
20

EDIT: Vue has this built-in. Skip to the bottom for more.

Original answer:

There are two ways to interpret your question, and therefore to answer it.

The first interpretation is: "how can I support routing to different pages within the same single-page app, e.g. localhost:8080/about and localhost:8080/report etc?". The answer to this is to use the router. It's reasonably straightforward and works well.

The second interpretation is: "my app is complex, and I have multiple single-page applications, e.g. one app for the 'website' part, one app for consumers to log in and do work, one app for admins, etc - how can vue do this, without making three entirely separate repositories?"

The answer to the latter is a single repository with multiple single-page apps. This demo looks like exactly what you're after:

https://github.com/Plortinus/vue-multiple-pages/

Look in particular at: https://github.com/Plortinus/vue-multiple-pages/blob/master/vue.config.js

Updated answer:

It turns out that vuejs has the idea of multiple top-level pages built-in. I mean, it makes sense - it's going to be really common, despite what many incorrect answers are saying about "no, it's for single page apps"!

You want the pages option in the vue.config.js file:

https://cli.vuejs.org/config/#pages

If your project doesn't have that file in the root directory, create it and vuejs will discover it.

There is a long and a short way to define each page. I used the short form here:

module.exports = {
  pages: {
    index: 'src/pages/index/main.ts',
    experiment: 'src/pages/experiment/main.ts'
  }
}

You don't have to put your work under "pages". It could be "/src/apps/index/index.ts" or whatever.

After moving code around and changing some imports from:

import HelloWorld from './components/HelloWorld'

to

import HelloWorld from '@/components/HelloWorld'

The app works - but the "experiment" app in my repo had to be loaded like this:

http://localhost:8080/experiment.html

Pretty ugly, and even worse because it uses the router which resulted in URLs like:

http://localhost:8080/experiment.html/about

Ugh.

Fortunately, this stackoverflow answer solved it. Update the vue.config.js file to include devServer options (make sure this is at the top level of the exported object:

devServer: {
  historyApiFallback: {
    rewrites: [
      { from: /\/index/, to: '/index.html' },
      { from: /\/experiment/, to: '/experiment.html' }
    ]
  }
}

Then also modify the router.ts file to append the extra path (in my case "experiment/":

export default new Router({
  mode: 'history',
  base: process.env.BASE_URL + 'experiment/',
  ...

Then URLs resolve nicely, e.g.: http://localhost:8080/experiment/about

6
  • Is this devServer option to rewrite the URLs to look nicer meant to be used in production?
    – Jack
    Jan 25, 2019 at 11:24
  • Not in my opinion, no It's a development server, designed to make development easy, and not intended for production use. Webpack produces nice lean output that can be served in production as a set of static files, eg cloud front, nginx, etc. That doesn't answer how to serve an api, but that's another question entirely.
    – Andrew E
    Jan 26, 2019 at 16:27
  • What you're saying is that when you build it for prod, the cli will create dist/index.html, dist/experiment/index.html, etc. and each index.html is it's own SPA? But it doesn't work that way in DEV.
    – Jack
    Jan 27, 2019 at 4:22
  • Yes, that's correct, and IMO how it should be. It sounds like you have a concern about something there. If so, I suggest ask a new full question about it, and that concern could be addressed properly.
    – Andrew E
    Jan 28, 2019 at 23:15
  • Is it possible to utilize the pages of vue.config.js to also produce different versions of css/, img/, and js/ directories for each page? Feb 23, 2021 at 16:20
2

This may not be relevant to the question, but bear with me, maybe my answer can help someone. I use webpack+vue, and I have figured out how to build multiple pages applications. Here my webpack.config.js:

const path = require('path');
const fs = require('fs')
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
const CleanWebpackPlugin = require('clean-webpack-plugin');
const VueLoaderPlugin = require('vue-loader/lib/plugin');
const TerserPlugin = require('terser-webpack-plugin');
const MiniCssExtractPlugin = require("mini-css-extract-plugin");
const OptimizeCSSAssetsPlugin = require("optimize-css-assets-webpack-plugin");

module.exports = {
    entry: {
        app: './src/app.js',
        mgmt: ['./src/modules/mgmt/mgmt.js'],
        login: './src/modules/login/login.js'
    },
    output: {
        path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
        // publicPath: '/ahezime/',
        filename: (chunkData) => {
            console.log('chuckData.chunk.name => ', chunkData.chunk.name)
            return chunkData.chunk.name === 'app' ? './[name].bundle.js' : './[name]/[name].bundle.js';
        }
    },
    optimization: {
        minimizer: [
            new TerserPlugin(),
            new OptimizeCSSAssetsPlugin({})
        ]
    },
    plugins: [
        new MiniCssExtractPlugin({
            filename: "[name].css",
            chunkFilename: "[id].css"
        }),
        new CleanWebpackPlugin(['dist']),
        new VueLoaderPlugin(),
        new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
            title: 'app',
            template: './src/app.html',
            // inject: false,
            chunks: ['app'],
            filename: './index.html'
        }),
        new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
            title: 'mgmt',
            template: './src/modules/mgmt/mgmt.html',
            // inject: false,
            chunks: ['mgmt'],
            filename: './mgmt/index.html'
        }),
        new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
            title: 'login',
            template: './src/modules/login/login.html',
            // inject: false,
            chunks: ['login'],
            filename: './login/index.html'
        })
    ],
    module: {
        rules: [
            {
                test: /\.m?js$/,
                exclude: /(node_modules|bower_components)/,
                use: {
                    loader: 'babel-loader',
                    options: {
                        presets: ['@babel/preset-env'],
                        plugins: ['@babel/plugin-proposal-object-rest-spread']
                    }
                }
            }
        ],
        rules: [
            {
                test: /\.vue$/,
                exclude: /node_modules/,
                loader: 'vue-loader'
            },
            {
                test: /\.css$/,
                use: [
                    'vue-style-loader',
                    'style-loader',
                    'css-loader',
                    'sass-loader'
                ]
            },
            {
                test: /\.scss?$/,
                use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader', 'sass-loader']
            },
            {
                test: /\.(png|svg|jpg|gif)$/,
                use: [
                    'file-loader'
                ]
            },
            {
                test: /\.(woff|woff2|eot|ttf|otf)$/,
                use: [
                    'file-loader'
                ]
            }
        ]
    }
};

And here's my directory structure:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/uFvKx.png

And you can jump pages:

<template>
    <div>
        <h1>App</h1>
        <div>
            <a href="./login">Please click me, and let take you into the login page!!!</a>
        </div>
        <span>Before computed: {{ message }} </span>
        <br>
        <span>Afer computed: {{ computedMessage() }} </span>
    </div>
</template>

<script>
    export default {
        data() {
            return {
                message: 'Hello World!'
            }
        },
        computed: {
            reversedMessage: function() {
                return this.message.split('').reverse().join('')
            }
        },
        methods: {
            computedMessage: function() {
                return this.message.split('').reverse().join('')
            }
        }
    }
</script>
1
  • Audience please be noted, I haven't tried your solution yet, but please be noted. This is for Vue CLI before 3.x, Vue CLI 3 provides configuration for your Vue Projects, more info can be checked from the official docs on cli.vuejs.org/config/#pages Feb 7, 2019 at 15:34
-9

Note pointing users to what should be the accepted answer
At the moment of posting my initial answer I wasn't aware of the possibility of actually building MPAs in VueJS. My answer doesn't address the question asked therefore I will recommend to take a look at the answer provided by PJ.Wanderson bellow which should be the accepted answer

Inital Answer
Vue.js projects are SPAs(single page applications). You only have one .html file in the entire project which is the index.html file you mentioned. The "pages" you want to create, in vue.js are referred to as components. They will be plugged into the index.html file and rendered in the browser. A vue.js component comprises 3 parts:

<template>

</template>

<script>
export default {

}
</script>

<style>

</style>
  • Template: it contains all the html your page should display (this is where you put the html of your pages)
  • Script: it contains all JavaScript code that will be executed on the page/component
  • Style: it contains the CSS that will style that specific component/page

You can check this tutorial out for a quick-start Vue.js 2 Quickstart Tutorial 2017

It explains vue.js project structure and how the various files relate to each other

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  • 14
    This is not entirely correct. You can create MPA with Vue Cli. That's what you have pages for.
    – avizzzy
    Oct 12, 2018 at 15:49
  • Just adding more to what @avizzzy has said, this is actually isn't even a valid answer. It's not entirely correct isn't the right word. It's should be a false answer. This answer shouldn't even deserve as a solution. For you who interested in creating Multiple Pages Application (MPA) with Vue you can start one with Vue CLI 3, built in in Vue itself.. For more info please check the official docs at cli.vuejs.org/config/#pages Feb 7, 2019 at 15:39
  • 1
    I agree with irfandy and avizzzy though they aren't enough documentation on how to do this except for the Vue 3 documentation as of now. Feb 9, 2019 at 13:15
  • Sorry just updating, at the time @hippolyte edited this (Aug 8, 18), Vue CLI 3 has just released on Aug 10, 18, so this answer is not entirely wrong I guess. But since I'm new and barely touch that version before 3.x I can't say much for the version before it. Just noting others that this answer has been outdated.. @Silverster there are correct answer by @PJ.Wanderson which I just tested on Vue CLI 3.4.0. Feb 12, 2019 at 6:05

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