Auto imports
Nuxt auto-imports helper functions, composables and Vue APIs to use across your application without explicitly importing them. Based on the directory structure, every Nuxt application can also use auto-imports for its own components, composables and plugins. Components, composables or plugins can use these functions.
Contrary to a classic global declaration, Nuxt preserves typings and IDEs completions and hints, and only includes what is actually used in your production code.
In the documentation, every function that is not explicitly imported is auto-imported by Nuxt and can be used as-is in your code. You can find a reference for auto-imported composables and utilities in the API section.
In the server directory, we auto import exported functions and variables from server/utils/
.
You can also auto-import functions exported from custom folders or third-party packages by configuring the imports
section of your nuxt.config
file.
Built-in Auto-imports
Nuxt Auto-imports
Nuxt auto-imports functions and composables to perform data fetching, get access to the app context and runtime config, manage state or define components and plugins.
<script setup>
/* useAsyncData() and $fetch() are auto-imported */
const { data, refresh, pending } = await useAsyncData('/api/hello', () => $fetch('/api/hello'))
</script>
Vue Auto-imports
Vue 3 exposes Reactivity APIs like ref
or computed
, as well as lifecycle hooks and helpers that are auto-imported by Nuxt.
<script setup>
/* ref() and computed() are auto-imported */
const count = ref(1)
const double = computed(() => count.value * 2)
</script>
Using Vue and Nuxt composables
When you are using the built-in Composition API composables provided by Vue and Nuxt, be aware that many of them rely on being called in the right context.
During a component lifecycle, Vue tracks the temporary instance of the current component (and similarly, Nuxt tracks a temporary instance of nuxtApp
) via a global variable, and then unsets it in same tick. This is essential when server rendering, both to avoid cross-request state pollution (leaking a shared reference between two users) and to avoid leakage between different components.
That means that (with very few exceptions) you cannot use them outside a Nuxt plugin, Nuxt route middleware or Vue setup function. On top of that, you must use them synchronously - that is, you cannot use await
before calling a composable, except within <script setup>
blocks, within the setup function of a component declared with defineNuxtComponent
, in defineNuxtPlugin
or in defineNuxtRouteMiddleware
, where we perform a transform to keep the synchronous context even after the await
.
If you get an error message like Nuxt instance is unavailable
then it probably means you are calling a Nuxt composable in the wrong place in the Vue or Nuxt lifecycle.
See the full explanation in this comment.
Example
Example: Breaking code:
// trying to access runtime config outside a composable
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
export const useMyComposable = () => {
// accessing runtime config here
}
Example: Fixing the error:
export const useMyComposable = () => {
// Because your composable is called in the right place in the lifecycle,
// useRuntimeConfig will also work
const config = useRuntimeConfig()
// ...
}
Directory-based Auto-imports
Nuxt directly auto-imports files created in defined directories:
components/
for Vue components.composables/
for Vue composables.utils/
for helper functions and other utilities.
Explicit Imports
Nuxt exposes every auto-import with the #imports
alias that can be used to make the import explicit if needed:
<script setup>
import { ref, computed } from '#imports'
const count = ref(1)
const double = computed(() => count.value * 2)
</script>
Disable Auto-imports
In case you want to disable auto-imports, you can set imports.autoImport
to false
in your nuxt.config.ts
.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
imports: {
autoImport: false
}
})
This will disable implicit auto imports completely but it's still possible to use Explicit Imports.