Form Input Bindings
When dealing with forms on the frontend, we often need to sync the state of form input elements with corresponding state in JavaScript. It can be cumbersome to manually wire up value bindings and change event listeners:
<input
:value="text"
@input="event => text = event.target.value">
The v-model
directive helps us simplify the above to:
<input v-model="text">
In addition, v-model
can be used on inputs of different types, <textarea>
, and <select>
elements. It automatically expands to different DOM property and event pairs based on the element it is used on:
<input>
with text types and<textarea>
elements usevalue
property andinput
event;<input type="checkbox">
and<input type="radio">
usechecked
property andchange
event;<select>
usevalue
as a prop andchange
as an event.
Note
v-model
will ignore the initial value
, checked
or selected
attributes found on any form elements. It will always treat the current bound JavaScript state as the source of truth. You should declare the initial value on the JavaScript side, using the data
optionreactivity APIs.
Basic Usage
Text
<p>Message is: {{ message }}</p>
<input v-model="message" placeholder="edit me" />
Message is:
Note
For languages that require an IME (Chinese, Japanese, Korean etc.), you'll notice that v-model
doesn't get updated during IME composition. If you want to respond to these updates as well, use an input
event listener and value
binding instead of using v-model
.
Multiline text
<span>Multiline message is:</span>
<p style="white-space: pre-line;">{{ message }}</p>
<textarea v-model="message" placeholder="add multiple lines"></textarea>
Multiline message is:
Note that interpolation inside <textarea>
won't work. Use v-model
instead.
<!-- bad -->
<textarea>{{ text }}</textarea>
<!-- good -->
<textarea v-model="text"></textarea>
Checkbox
Single checkbox, boolean value:
<input type="checkbox" id="checkbox" v-model="checked" />
<label for="checkbox">{{ checked }}</label>
We can also bind multiple checkboxes to the same array or Set value:
const checkedNames = ref([])
export default {
data() {
return {
checkedNames: []
}
}
}
<div>Checked names: {{ checkedNames }}</div>
<input type="checkbox" id="jack" value="Jack" v-model="checkedNames">
<label for="jack">Jack</label>
<input type="checkbox" id="john" value="John" v-model="checkedNames">
<label for="john">John</label>
<input type="checkbox" id="mike" value="Mike" v-model="checkedNames">
<label for="mike">Mike</label>
Checked names: []
In this case, the checkedNames
array will always contain the values from the currently checked boxes.
Radio
<div>Picked: {{ picked }}</div>
<input type="radio" id="one" value="One" v-model="picked" />
<label for="one">One</label>
<input type="radio" id="two" value="Two" v-model="picked" />
<label for="two">Two</label>
Picked:
Select
Single select:
<div>Selected: {{ selected }}</div>
<select v-model="selected">
<option disabled value="">Please select one</option>
<option>A</option>
<option>B</option>
<option>C</option>
</select>
Selected:
Note
If the initial value of your v-model
expression does not match any of the options, the <select>
element will render in an "unselected" state. On iOS this will cause the user not being able to select the first item because iOS does not fire a change event in this case. It is therefore recommended to provide a disabled option with an empty value, as demonstrated in the example above.
Multiple select (bound to array):
<div>Selected: {{ selected }}</div>
<select v-model="selected" multiple>
<option>A</option>
<option>B</option>
<option>C</option>
</select>
Selected: []
Select options can be dynamically rendered with v-for
:
const selected = ref('A')
const options = ref([
{ text: 'One', value: 'A' },
{ text: 'Two', value: 'B' },
{ text: 'Three', value: 'C' }
])
export default {
data() {
return {
selected: 'A',
options: [
{ text: 'One', value: 'A' },
{ text: 'Two', value: 'B' },
{ text: 'Three', value: 'C' }
]
}
}
}
<select v-model="selected">
<option v-for="option in options" :value="option.value">
{{ option.text }}
</option>
</select>
<div>Selected: {{ selected }}</div>
Value Bindings
For radio, checkbox and select options, the v-model
binding values are usually static strings (or booleans for checkbox):
<!-- `picked` is a string "a" when checked -->
<input type="radio" v-model="picked" value="a" />
<!-- `toggle` is either true or false -->
<input type="checkbox" v-model="toggle" />
<!-- `selected` is a string "abc" when the first option is selected -->
<select v-model="selected">
<option value="abc">ABC</option>
</select>
But sometimes we may want to bind the value to a dynamic property on the current active instance. We can use v-bind
to achieve that. In addition, using v-bind
allows us to bind the input value to non-string values.
Checkbox
<input
type="checkbox"
v-model="toggle"
true-value="yes"
false-value="no" />
true-value
and false-value
are Vue-specific attributes that only work with v-model
. Here the toggle
property's value will be set to 'yes'
when the box is checked, and set to 'no'
when unchecked. You can also bind them to dynamic values using v-bind
:
<input
type="checkbox"
v-model="toggle"
:true-value="dynamicTrueValue"
:false-value="dynamicFalseValue" />
Tip
The true-value
and false-value
attributes don't affect the input's value
attribute, because browsers don't include unchecked boxes in form submissions. To guarantee that one of two values is submitted in a form (e.g. "yes" or "no"), use radio inputs instead.
Radio
<input type="radio" v-model="pick" :value="first" />
<input type="radio" v-model="pick" :value="second" />
pick
will be set to the value of first
when the first radio input is checked, and set to the value of second
when the second one is checked.
Select Options
<select v-model="selected">
<!-- inline object literal -->
<option :value="{ number: 123 }">123</option>
</select>
v-model
supports value bindings of non-string values as well! In the above example, when the option is selected, selected
will be set to the object literal value of { number: 123 }
.
Modifiers
.lazy
By default, v-model
syncs the input with the data after each input
event (with the exception of IME composition as stated above). You can add the lazy
modifier to instead sync after change
events:
<!-- synced after "change" instead of "input" -->
<input v-model.lazy="msg" />
.number
If you want user input to be automatically typecast as a number, you can add the number
modifier to your v-model
managed inputs:
<input v-model.number="age" />
If the value cannot be parsed with parseFloat()
, then the original value is used instead.
The number
modifier is applied automatically if the input has type="number"
.
.trim
If you want whitespace from user input to be trimmed automatically, you can add the trim
modifier to your v-model
-managed inputs:
<input v-model.trim="msg" />
v-model
with Components
If you're not yet familiar with Vue's components, you can skip this for now.
HTML's built-in input types won't always meet your needs. Fortunately, Vue components allow you to build reusable inputs with completely customized behavior. These inputs even work with v-model
! To learn more, read about Usage with v-model
in the Components guide.