* remove foo bar examples, move tagging to values * update tagline, add headers to values * hunting down more foos
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Getting and Setting
v-model
The most common use case for vue-select is to have the chosen value synced with a parent component. vue-select
takes advantage of the v-model syntax to sync values with a parent. The v-model syntax works with
primitives and objects.
<v-select v-model="selected" />
Note that when using the multiple prop, the v-model value will always be an array.
Props and Events
Sometimes v-model might not fit your use case. For example, when working with Vuex,
you'll need to trigger a mutation rather than mutating a value directly. In that case, maybe you need
to bind a pre-selected value, and trigger a mutation when it changes.
vue-select exposes the value prop and an input event to enable this. This combo of props and
events is also how Vue wires up the v-model syntax internally.
Prop: value
The value prop lets vue-select know what value is currently selected. It will accept strings,
numbers or objects. If you're using a multiple v-select, you'll want to pass an array.
<v-select :value="selected" />
::: tip 🤓
Anytime you bind the value prop directly, you're responsible for updating the bound variable
in your code using the @input event.
:::
Event: input
The input event is triggered anytime the value state changes, and is emitted with the value
state as it's only parameter.
Vuex Support
The value prop and emit event are very useful when using a state management tool, like Vuex.
You can bind the selected value with :value="$store.myValue", and use the input event to
trigger a mutation, or dispatch an action – or anything else you might need to do when the selection
changes.
<v-select :value="$store.myValue" @input="setSelected" />
methods: {
setSelected(value) {
// trigger a mutation, or dispatch an action
}
}
Transforming Selections
When the options array contains objects, vue-select returns the whole object as dropdown value
upon selection. This approach makes no assumptions about the data you need, and provides a lot of
flexibility. However, there will be situations where maybe you just need to return a single key
from an object.
Returning a single key with reduce
If you need to return a single key, or transform the selection before it is synced, vue-select
provides a reduce callback that allows you to transform a selected option before it is passed to
the @input event. Consider this data structure:
let options = [{code: 'CA', country: 'Canada'}];
If we want to display the country, but return the code to v-model, we can use the reduce
prop to receive only the data that's required.
<v-select :options="options" :reduce="country => country.code" label="country" />
Deep Nested Values
The reduce property also works well when you have a deeply nested value:
{
country: 'canada',
meta: {
code: 'ca'
provinces: [...],
}
}
<v-select :options="options" :reduce="country => country.meta.code" label="country" />
Single/Multiple Selection
By default, vue-select supports choosing a single value. If you need multiple values, use the
multiple boolean prop, much the same way you would on an HTML <select> element. When multiple
is true, v-model and value must be an array.
<v-select multiple v-model="selected" :options="['Canada','United States']" />
Tagging
To allow input that's not present within the options, set the taggable prop to true.
<v-select taggable multiple />
If you want added tags to be pushed to the options array, set push-tags to true.
<v-select taggable multiple />