* Add support for npm extensions * Allow extensions to import vue from the main app * Bundle app extensions on server startup * Fix return type of useLayoutState * Add shared package * Add extension-sdk package * Add type declaration files to allow deep import of shared package * Add extension loading to shared * Refactor extension loading to use shared package * Remove app bundle newline replacement * Fix extension loading in development * Rename extension entrypoints * Update extension build instructions * Remove vite auto-replacement workaround * Update package-lock.json * Remove newline from generated extension entrypoint * Update package-lock.json * Build shared package as cjs and esm * Move useLayoutState composable to shared * Reverse vite base env check * Share useLayoutState composable through extension-sdk * Update layout docs * Update package versions * Small cleanup * Fix layout docs * Fix imports * Add nickrum to codeowners * Fix typo * Add 'em to vite config too * Fix email Co-authored-by: rijkvanzanten <rijkvanzanten@me.com>
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Custom Displays
Displays are small inline components that allow you to create new ways of viewing field values throughout the App. Learn more about Displays.
1. Setup the Boilerplate
Every display is a standalone "package" that contains at least a metadata file and a Vue component. We recommend using the following file structure:
src/
index.js
display.vue
src/index.js
import DisplayComponent from './display.vue';
export default {
id: 'custom',
name: 'Custom',
description: 'This is my custom display!',
icon: 'box',
handler: DisplayComponent,
types: ['string'],
};
id— The unique key for this display. It is good practice to scope proprietary displays with an author prefix.name— The human-readable name for this display.description— A short description (<80 characters) of this display shown in the App.icon— An icon name from the material icon set, or the extended list of Directus custom icons.handler— A function, or reference to your Vue component.types— A CSV of supported types.
::: tip
See the TypeScript definition for more info on what can go into this object.
:::
src/display.vue
<template>
<div>Value: {{ value }}</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: {
value: String,
},
};
</script>
The props you can use in an display are:
value— The value of the parent field.interface- The interface of the parent field.interface-options- The options for the parent field's interface.type— The type of the parent field.collection— The collection name of the parent field.field— The key of the parent field.
Alternatively, you can specify a function for the handler. This allows you to make simple displays that don't need a full component rendered:
export default {
id: 'custom',
name: 'Custom',
description: 'This is my custom display!',
icon: 'box',
handler: function (value) {
return value.toLowerCase();
},
types: ['string'],
};
2. Install Dependencies and Configure the Buildchain
Set up a package.json file by running:
npm init -y
To be read by the Admin App, your custom display's Vue component must first be bundled into a single index.js file. We
recommend bundling your code using Rollup. To install this and the other development dependencies, run this command:
npm i -D rollup @rollup/plugin-node-resolve @rollup/plugin-commonjs rollup-plugin-terser rollup-plugin-vue @vue/compiler-sfc
You can then use the following Rollup configuration within rollup.config.js:
import { nodeResolve } from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
import commonjs from '@rollup/plugin-commonjs';
import { terser } from 'rollup-plugin-terser';
import vue from 'rollup-plugin-vue';
export default {
input: 'src/index.js',
output: {
format: 'es',
file: 'dist/index.js',
},
external: ['vue', '@directus/extension-sdk'],
plugins: [vue(), nodeResolve(), commonjs(), terser()],
};
::: tip Building multiple extensions
You can export an array of build configurations, so you can bundle (or even watch) multiple extensions at the same time. See the Rollup configuration file documentation for more info.
:::
3. Develop Your Custom Display
The display itself is simply a function or a Vue component, providing a blank canvas for creating anything you need.
4. Build and Deploy
To build the display for use within Directus, run:
npx rollup -c
Finally, move the output from your display's dist folder into your project's /extensions/displays/my-custom-display
folder. Keep in mind that the extensions directory is configurable within your env file, and may be located elsewhere.