Customisation
You might choose to customise the accessor function using the helper function useAccessor
. You pass this an object with state
, actions
, mutations
, etc. Child modules are within a modules
property.
Injecting a custom accessor
plugins/custom-store-accessor.ts
import { useAccessor } from 'typed-vuex'
import { InjectKey } from 'vue/types/options'
import { Context } from '@nuxt/types'
import * as store from '~/store'
import * as submodule from '~/store/submodule'
type Inject = (name: InjectKey, property: unknown) => void
export default async ({ store }: Context, inject: Inject) => {
inject(
'accessor',
useAccessor({
...store,
modules: {
submodule,
},
})
)
}
If you are using a custom accessor in a Nuxt project, bear in mind that
useAccessor
used on its own will treat modules as non-namespaced unless they include
namespaced: true
.
Typing your custom accessor
You can use the helper function getAccessorType
to access the type of the accessor you've generated - by passing it the exact same object that useAccessor
receives.
It gets compiled down to () => {}
so there is no performance hit.
import { getAccessorType } from 'typed-vuex'
import * as store from '~/store'
import * as submodule from '~/store/submodule'
const accessorType = getAccessorType({
...store,
modules: {
submodule,
},
})
// Now you can access the type of the accessor.
const accessor: typeof accessorType