Built using Vue 3.0.
Vue.js PWA/SPA template configured for SEO (initially scaffolded with vue-cli). You can find the React version here: react-seo-friendly-spa-template.
Features:
- TypeScript
- Custom
BackToTop.vue
component that usesvue-scrollto
- Custom
ToggleTheme.vue
component that handles light/dark theme transitions - Google analytics management with
vue-gtag-next
- Route meta tag management with
vue-meta
- Configured to serve prerendered static HTML with
prerender-spa-plugin
This template reflects some of the setup I went through when experimenting with the creation of my own static front-end personal site that was to be hosted on Netlify (using GitHub as a repository/pipeline). You can find that experiment live here. After playing around with this process I figured I'd build a higher-level abstraction of that project for quick re-use in the future.
initial scaffolding
vue-meta
- plugin that allows you to manage your app's meta information, much like react-helmet
does for React. However, instead of setting your data as props passed to a proprietary component, you simply export it as part of your component's data using the metaInfo property.
I have meta data configured to be handled via a simple, reusable compostion (@/composables/useMetaRoute.ts
) - simply import and execute this composable function in the setup
function of your component and it will attempt to resolve any meta data definitions you configure for that route:
useMetaRoute.ts
import { useRoute } from 'vue-router';
import { useMeta, type MetaSourceProxy } from 'vue-meta';
export default function useMetaRoute(): MetaSourceProxy {
const route = useRoute();
const { title, description } = route?.meta ?? {};
const url = window?.location.href || 'unknown';
const { meta } = useMeta({
title,
description,
link: {
rel: 'canonical',
href: url
},
og: {
url,
title,
description
}
});
return meta;
}
About.vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { Alert } from '@/components';
import { useMetaRoute } from '@/composables';
useMetaRoute();
</script>
vue-gtag-next
- The global site tag (gtag.js) is a JavaScript tagging framework and API that allows you to send event data to Google Analytics, Google Ads, and Google Marketing Platform.
Inititial plugin configuration found in config/vue-gtag.config.ts
and then hooked up in the setup function of the application's root component (App.vue
).
vue-gtag.config.ts
import type { Options } from 'vue-gtag-next';
const isEnabled = true;
const isProduction = process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production';
const useDebugger = isEnabled && !isProduction;
export const VUE_GTAG_OPTIONS: Options = {
isEnabled,
useDebugger,
property: {
id: 'UA-000000-01',
params: {
send_page_view: false,
}
}
};
App.vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { watch, unref } from 'vue';
import { useRouter } from 'vue-router';
import { useGtag } from 'vue-gtag-next';
import { useActiveMeta } from 'vue-meta';
const router = useRouter();
const { pageview } = useGtag();
const activeMeta = useActiveMeta();
function trackPageView() {
setTimeout(() => {
const { currentRoute, getRoutes } = router;
const { path } = unref(currentRoute);
const isValidPath = getRoutes().some((x) => x.path === path);
if (isValidPath) {
pageview(path);
}
}, 10);
}
watch(
() => activeMeta,
() => trackPageView(),
{ deep: true }
);
</script>
prerender-spa-plugin
- Prerenders static HTML in a single-page application. This is a more straightforward substitue for SSR (Server Side Rendering) and the primary benefit is SEO.
Configured in the app as follows:
vue.config.js
const path = require("path");
const cheerio = require("cheerio");
const PrerenderSPAPlugin = require("prerender-spa-plugin-next");
const PuppeteerRenderer = require("@prerenderer/renderer-puppeteer");
module.exports = {
lintOnSave: false,
// define port
devServer: {
port: "3000",
hot: true,
},
configureWebpack: (config) => {
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== "production") {
return {};
}
return {
performance: {
hints: false,
},
plugins: [
// https://github.com/chrisvfritz/prerender-spa-plugin
new PrerenderSPAPlugin({
staticDir: config.output.path,
routes: ["/", "/about"],
renderer: PuppeteerRenderer,
postProcess(context) {
if (context.route === "/404") {
context.outputPath = path.join(config.output.path, "/404.html");
}
// Add 'data-server-rendered' attribute so app knows to hydrate with any changes
const $ = cheerio.load(context.html);
$("#app").attr("data-server-rendered", "true");
context.html = $.html();
return context;
},
}),
],
};
}
};
Remainder of the configuration takes place in vue.config.js
file where the plugin is added and configured. In the postProcess
callback I am editing the prerendered content using cheerio
so you can load the raw prerendered html string into a usable document and modify it using JQuery-like syntax, rather than parsing a long string and calling .replace()
.
Note: I found that dynamically adding the data-server-rendered='true'
attribute in the postProcess
(rather than hard-coding in the index.html file) seems to work well - this lets the client know that this nodes contents was served as prerendered content and to hydrate the HTML with updates, rather than re-render/replace.
npm install
npm run serve
npm run build
npm run lint
- Run the linter (configured in the tslint.json file found in the root of this project)
npm run sitemap
- This command will execute code in the sitemap-generator.js. Using the sitemapUrl parameter defined in that file (should reflect your registered domain name) a sitemap.xml is generated and persisted under the 'public' folder - this file is referenced in the robots.txt file. This uses the
sitemap-generator
package.