Application API 
createApp() 
Creates an application instance.
- Type ts- function createApp(rootComponent: Component, rootProps?: object): App
- Details - The first argument is the root component. The second optional argument is the props to be passed to the root component. 
- Example - With inline root component: js- import { createApp } from 'vue' const app = createApp({ /* root component options */ })- With imported component: js- import { createApp } from 'vue' import App from './App.vue' const app = createApp(App)
- See also Guide - Creating a Vue Application 
createSSRApp() 
Creates an application instance in SSR Hydration mode. Usage is exactly the same as createApp().
app.mount() 
Mounts the application instance in a container element.
- Type ts- interface App { mount(rootContainer: Element | string): ComponentPublicInstance }
- Details - The argument can either be an actual DOM element or a CSS selector (the first matched element will be used). Returns the root component instance. - If the component has a template or a render function defined, it will replace any existing DOM nodes inside the container. Otherwise, if the runtime compiler is available, the - innerHTMLof the container will be used as the template.- In SSR hydration mode, it will hydrate the existing DOM nodes inside the container. If there are mismatches, the existing DOM nodes will be morphed to match the expected output. - For each app instance, - mount()can only be called once.
- Example js- import { createApp } from 'vue' const app = createApp(/* ... */) app.mount('#app')- Can also mount to an actual DOM element: js- app.mount(document.body.firstChild)
app.unmount() 
Unmounts a mounted application instance, triggering the unmount lifecycle hooks for all components in the application's component tree.
- Type ts- interface App { unmount(): void }
app.onUnmount() 
Registers a callback to be called when the app is unmounted.
- Type ts- interface App { onUnmount(callback: () => any): void }
app.component() 
Registers a global component if passing both a name string and a component definition, or retrieves an already registered one if only the name is passed.
- Type ts- interface App { component(name: string): Component | undefined component(name: string, component: Component): this }
- Example js- import { createApp } from 'vue' const app = createApp({}) // register an options object app.component('MyComponent', { /* ... */ }) // retrieve a registered component const MyComponent = app.component('MyComponent')
- See also Component Registration 
app.directive() 
Registers a global custom directive if passing both a name string and a directive definition, or retrieves an already registered one if only the name is passed.
- Type ts- interface App { directive(name: string): Directive | undefined directive(name: string, directive: Directive): this }
- Example js- import { createApp } from 'vue' const app = createApp({ /* ... */ }) // register (object directive) app.directive('myDirective', { /* custom directive hooks */ }) // register (function directive shorthand) app.directive('myDirective', () => { /* ... */ }) // retrieve a registered directive const myDirective = app.directive('myDirective')
- See also Custom Directives 
app.use() 
Installs a plugin.
- Type ts- interface App { use(plugin: Plugin, ...options: any[]): this }
- Details - Expects the plugin as the first argument, and optional plugin options as the second argument. - The plugin can either be an object with an - install()method, or just a function that will be used as the- install()method. The options (second argument of- app.use()) will be passed along to the plugin's- install()method.- When - app.use()is called on the same plugin multiple times, the plugin will be installed only once.
- Example js- import { createApp } from 'vue' import MyPlugin from './plugins/MyPlugin' const app = createApp({ /* ... */ }) app.use(MyPlugin)
- See also Plugins 
app.mixin() 
Applies a global mixin (scoped to the application). A global mixin applies its included options to every component instance in the application.
Not Recommended
Mixins are supported in Vue 3 mainly for backwards compatibility, due to their widespread use in ecosystem libraries. Use of mixins, especially global mixins, should be avoided in application code.
For logic reuse, prefer Composables instead.
- Type ts- interface App { mixin(mixin: ComponentOptions): this }
app.provide() 
Provide a value that can be injected in all descendant components within the application.
- Type ts- interface App { provide<T>(key: InjectionKey<T> | symbol | string, value: T): this }
- Details - Expects the injection key as the first argument, and the provided value as the second. Returns the application instance itself. 
- Example js- import { createApp } from 'vue' const app = createApp(/* ... */) app.provide('message', 'hello')- Inside a component in the application: js- import { inject } from 'vue' export default { setup() { console.log(inject('message')) // 'hello' } }
- See also 
app.runWithContext() 
- Only supported in 3.3+
Execute a callback with the current app as injection context.
- Type ts- interface App { runWithContext<T>(fn: () => T): T }
- Details - Expects a callback function and runs the callback immediately. During the synchronous call of the callback, - inject()calls are able to look up injections from the values provided by the current app, even when there is no current active component instance. The return value of the callback will also be returned.
- Example js- import { inject } from 'vue' app.provide('id', 1) const injected = app.runWithContext(() => { return inject('id') }) console.log(injected) // 1
app.version 
Provides the version of Vue that the application was created with. This is useful inside plugins, where you might need conditional logic based on different Vue versions.
- Type ts- interface App { version: string }
- Example - Performing a version check inside a plugin: js- export default { install(app) { const version = Number(app.version.split('.')[0]) if (version < 3) { console.warn('This plugin requires Vue 3') } } }
- See also Global API - version 
app.config 
Every application instance exposes a config object that contains the configuration settings for that application. You can modify its properties (documented below) before mounting your application.
js
import { createApp } from 'vue'
const app = createApp(/* ... */)
console.log(app.config)app.config.errorHandler 
Assign a global handler for uncaught errors propagating from within the application.
- Type ts- interface AppConfig { errorHandler?: ( err: unknown, instance: ComponentPublicInstance | null, // `info` is a Vue-specific error info, // e.g. which lifecycle hook the error was thrown in info: string ) => void }
- Details - The error handler receives three arguments: the error, the component instance that triggered the error, and an information string specifying the error source type. - It can capture errors from the following sources: - Component renders
- Event handlers
- Lifecycle hooks
- setup()function
- Watchers
- Custom directive hooks
- Transition hooks
 - TIP - In production, the 3rd argument ( - info) will be a shortened code instead of the full information string. You can find the code to string mapping in the Production Error Code Reference.
- Example js- app.config.errorHandler = (err, instance, info) => { // handle error, e.g. report to a service }
app.config.warnHandler 
Assign a custom handler for runtime warnings from Vue.
- Type ts- interface AppConfig { warnHandler?: ( msg: string, instance: ComponentPublicInstance | null, trace: string ) => void }
- Details - The warning handler receives the warning message as the first argument, the source component instance as the second argument, and a component trace string as the third. - It can be used to filter out specific warnings to reduce console verbosity. All Vue warnings should be addressed during development, so this is only recommended during debug sessions to focus on specific warnings among many, and should be removed once the debugging is done. - TIP - Warnings only work during development, so this config is ignored in production mode. 
- Example js- app.config.warnHandler = (msg, instance, trace) => { // `trace` is the component hierarchy trace }
app.config.performance 
Set this to true to enable component init, compile, render and patch performance tracing in the browser devtool performance/timeline panel. Only works in development mode and in browsers that support the performance.mark API.
- Type: - boolean
- See also Guide - Performance 
app.config.compilerOptions 
Configure runtime compiler options. Values set on this object will be passed to the in-browser template compiler and affect every component in the configured app. Note you can also override these options on a per-component basis using the compilerOptions option.
Important
This config option is only respected when using the full build (i.e. the standalone vue.js that can compile templates in the browser). If you are using the runtime-only build with a build setup, compiler options must be passed to @vue/compiler-dom via build tool configurations instead.
- For - vue-loader: pass via the- compilerOptionsloader option. Also see how to configure it in- vue-cli.
- For - vite: pass via- @vitejs/plugin-vueoptions.
app.config.compilerOptions.isCustomElement 
Specifies a check method to recognize native custom elements.
- Type: - (tag: string) => boolean
- Details - Should return - trueif the tag should be treated as a native custom element. For a matched tag, Vue will render it as a native element instead of attempting to resolve it as a Vue component.- Native HTML and SVG tags don't need to be matched in this function - Vue's parser recognizes them automatically. 
- Example js- // treat all tags starting with 'ion-' as custom elements app.config.compilerOptions.isCustomElement = (tag) => { return tag.startsWith('ion-') }
- See also Vue and Web Components 
app.config.compilerOptions.whitespace 
Adjusts template whitespace handling behavior.
- Type: - 'condense' | 'preserve'
- Default: - 'condense'
- Details - Vue removes / condenses whitespace characters in templates to produce more efficient compiled output. The default strategy is "condense", with the following behavior: - Leading / ending whitespace characters inside an element are condensed into a single space.
- Whitespace characters between elements that contain newlines are removed.
- Consecutive whitespace characters in text nodes are condensed into a single space.
 - Setting this option to - 'preserve'will disable (2) and (3).
- Example js- app.config.compilerOptions.whitespace = 'preserve'
app.config.compilerOptions.delimiters 
Adjusts the delimiters used for text interpolation within the template.
- Type: - [string, string]
- Default: - ['{{', '}}']
- Details - This is typically used to avoid conflicting with server-side frameworks that also use mustache syntax. 
- Example js- // Delimiters changed to ES6 template string style app.config.compilerOptions.delimiters = ['${', '}']
app.config.compilerOptions.comments 
Adjusts treatment of HTML comments in templates.
- Type: - boolean
- Default: - false
- Details - By default, Vue will remove the comments in production. Setting this option to - truewill force Vue to preserve comments even in production. Comments are always preserved during development. This option is typically used when Vue is used with other libraries that rely on HTML comments.
- Example js- app.config.compilerOptions.comments = true
app.config.globalProperties 
An object that can be used to register global properties that can be accessed on any component instance inside the application.
- Type ts- interface AppConfig { globalProperties: Record<string, any> }
- Details - This is a replacement of Vue 2's - Vue.prototypewhich is no longer present in Vue 3. As with anything global, this should be used sparingly.- If a global property conflicts with a component’s own property, the component's own property will have higher priority. 
- Usage js- app.config.globalProperties.msg = 'hello'- This makes - msgavailable inside any component template in the application, and also on- thisof any component instance:js- export default { mounted() { console.log(this.msg) // 'hello' } }
- See also Guide - Augmenting Global Properties 
app.config.optionMergeStrategies 
An object for defining merging strategies for custom component options.
- Type ts- interface AppConfig { optionMergeStrategies: Record<string, OptionMergeFunction> } type OptionMergeFunction = (to: unknown, from: unknown) => any
- Details - Some plugins / libraries add support for custom component options (by injecting global mixins). These options may require special merging logic when the same option needs to be "merged" from multiple sources (e.g. mixins or component inheritance). - A merge strategy function can be registered for a custom option by assigning it on the - app.config.optionMergeStrategiesobject using the option's name as the key.- The merge strategy function receives the value of that option defined on the parent and child instances as the first and second arguments, respectively. 
- Example js- const app = createApp({ // option from self msg: 'Vue', // option from a mixin mixins: [ { msg: 'Hello ' } ], mounted() { // merged options exposed on this.$options console.log(this.$options.msg) } }) // define a custom merge strategy for `msg` app.config.optionMergeStrategies.msg = (parent, child) => { return (parent || '') + (child || '') } app.mount('#app') // logs 'Hello Vue'
- See also Component Instance - - $options
app.config.idPrefix 
Configure a prefix for all IDs generated via useId() inside this application.
- Type: - string
- Default: - undefined
- Example js- app.config.idPrefix = 'myApp'js- // in a component: const id1 = useId() // 'myApp:0' const id2 = useId() // 'myApp:1'
app.config.throwUnhandledErrorInProduction 
Force unhandled errors to be thrown in production mode.
- Type: - boolean
- Default: - false
- Details - By default, errors thrown inside a Vue application but not explicitly handled have different behavior between development and production modes: - In development, the error is thrown and can possibly crash the application. This is to make the error more prominent so that it can be noticed and fixed during development. 
- In production, the error will only be logged to the console to minimize the impact to end users. However, this may prevent errors that only happen in production from being caught by error monitoring services. 
 - By setting - app.config.throwUnhandledErrorInProductionto- true, unhandled errors will be thrown even in production mode.