I understand the concept: the child works on its own copy of the prop data, and when it's changed it it can $emit
that change so the parent can update itself.
However, I'm dealing with a recursive tree structure, e.g. a filesystem, is a good analogy.
[
{ type: 'dir', name: 'music', children: [
{ type: 'dir', name: 'genres', children: [
{ type: 'dir', name: 'triphop', children: [
{ type: 'file', name: 'Portishead' },
...
]},
]}
]}
]}
I have a recursive component called Thing
that takes a childtree
prop and looks a bit like this:
<template>
<input v-model="tree.name" />
<thing v-for="childtree in tree.children" :tree="childtree" ></thing>
</template>
Modifying a name is obviously going to modify the prop directly, which is to be avoided, and Vue emits a warning about it.
However, the only way I can see to avoid that would be for each component to do a deep copy of childtree
; then $emit
a copy of our copy and have a @input
(or such) copy it back to the original; all the way up the tree, which would then change the props all the way down the tree causing another deep copy of everything!
That feels like it's going to be really inefficient on a tree of any size.
Is there a better way? I know you can trick Vue into not issuing the error/warning example jsfiddle.