Skip to content

Complete guide to

Mastering Pinia

written by its creator

Nuxt.js

Using Pinia with Nuxt is easier since Nuxt takes care of a lot of things when it comes to server side rendering. For instance, you don't need to care about serialization nor XSS attacks. Pinia supports Nuxt Bridge and Nuxt 3. For bare Nuxt 2 support, see below.

Installation

bash
yarn add pinia @pinia/nuxt
# or with npm
npm install pinia @pinia/nuxt

TIP

If you're using npm, you might encounter an ERESOLVE unable to resolve dependency tree error. In that case, add the following to your package.json:

js
"overrides": {
  "vue": "latest"
}

We supply a module to handle everything for you, you only need to add it to modules in your nuxt.config.js file:

js
// nuxt.config.js
export default defineNuxtConfig({
  // ... other options
  modules: [
    // ...
    '@pinia/nuxt',
  ],
})

And that's it, use your store as usual!

Awaiting for actions in pages

As with onServerPrefetch(), you can call a store action within asyncData(). Given how useAsyncData() works, make sure to return a value. This will allow Nuxt to skip running the action on the client side and reuse the value from the server.

vue
<script setup>
const store = useStore()
// we could also extract the data, but it's already present in the store
await useAsyncData('user', () => store.fetchUser())
</script>

If your action doesn't resolve a value, you can add any non nullish value:

vue
<script setup>
const store = useStore()
await useAsyncData('user', () => store.fetchUser().then(() => true))
</script>

TIP

If you want to use a store outside of setup(), remember to pass the pinia object to useStore(). We added it to the context so you have access to it in asyncData() and fetch():

js
import { useStore } from '~/stores/myStore'

export default {
  asyncData({ $pinia }) {
    const store = useStore($pinia)
  },
}

Auto imports

By default @pinia/nuxt exposes a few auto imports:

  • usePinia(), which is similar to getActivePinia() but works better with Nuxt. You can add auto imports to make your life easier:
  • defineStore() to define stores
  • storeToRefs() when you need to extract individual refs from a store
  • acceptHMRUpdate() for hot module replacement

It also automatically imports all stores defined within your stores folder. It doesn't lookup for nested stores though. You can customize this behavior by setting the storesDirs option:

ts
// nuxt.config.ts
export default defineNuxtConfig({
  // ... other options
  modules: ['@pinia/nuxt'],
  pinia: {
    storesDirs: ['./stores/**', './custom-folder/stores/**'],
  },
})

Note the folders are relative to the root of your project. If you change the srcDir option, you need to adapt the paths accordingly.

Nuxt 2 without bridge

Pinia supports Nuxt 2 until @pinia/nuxt v0.2.1. Make sure to also install @nuxtjs/composition-api alongside pinia:

bash
yarn add pinia @pinia/nuxt@0.2.1 @nuxtjs/composition-api
# or with npm
npm install pinia @pinia/nuxt@0.2.1 @nuxtjs/composition-api

We supply a module to handle everything for you, you only need to add it to buildModules in your nuxt.config.js file:

js
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
  // ... other options
  buildModules: [
    // Nuxt 2 only:
    // https://composition-api.nuxtjs.org/getting-started/setup#quick-start
    '@nuxtjs/composition-api/module',
    '@pinia/nuxt',
  ],
}

TypeScript

If you are using Nuxt 2 (@pinia/nuxt < 0.3.0) with TypeScript or have a jsconfig.json, you should also add the types for context.pinia:

json
{
  "types": [
    // ...
    "@pinia/nuxt"
  ]
}

This will also ensure you have autocompletion 😉 .

Using Pinia alongside Vuex

It is recommended to avoid using both Pinia and Vuex but if you need to use both, you need to tell pinia to not disable it:

js
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
  buildModules: [
    '@nuxtjs/composition-api/module',
    ['@pinia/nuxt', { disableVuex: false }],
  ],
  // ... other options
}

Released under the MIT License.