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LU05d - v-if
Learning ojectives
- I can explain what function v-if directives fulfil within the DOM.
- I can name the three v-if variants that are possible in principle.
- I can apply v-if to specific examples.
Sources
Introduction
The v-if directive in Vue.js is used to conditionally render elements in the DOM. If the condition provided in the v-if evaluates to true, the element is rendered; otherwise, it is removed from the DOM entirely. This makes v-if a powerful tool for controlling the visibility of elements based on dynamic data.
<div id="app"> <button @click="toggleMessage">Toggle Message</button> <p v-if="isVisible">Hello, Vue.js!</p> </div> <script> new Vue({ el: '#app', data: { isVisible: true }, methods: { toggleMessage() { this.isVisible = !this.isVisible; } } }); </script>
In this example above, the paragraph element (<p>) is conditionally displayed based on the value of the isVisible data property. Clicking the button toggles the message's visibility.
Variants
There are basically three variants of v-if:
- v-if
- v-else-of
- v-else
1. v-if
- Used to conditionally render an element based on whether the condition evaluates to true.
- If the condition is false, the element is completely removed from the DOM.
Example:
<p v-if="isVisible">This is visible when isVisible is true.</p>
2. v-else-if
- Used to create an additional condition in conjunction with v-if.
- orks like an else-if statement in programming, allowing multiple conditions to be checked.
<p v-if="condition === 'A'">Condition A is true.</p> <p v-else-if="condition === 'B'">Condition B is true.</p>
3. v-else
- Provides a fallback for when none of the v-if or v-else-if conditions are met.
- It does not accept any condition and must directly follow v-if or v-else-if.
<p v-if="condition === 'A'">Condition A is true.</p> <p v-else-if="condition === 'B'">Condition B is true.</p> <p v-else>Neither condition A nor B is true.</p>
Additional Material