Vue.js 3+ rich text editor component
Important: This guide is about the CKEditor 5 integration with Vue.js 3+. To learn more about the integration with Vue.js 2.x, check out the “Rich text editor component for Vue.js 2.x” guide.
CKEditor 5 consists of the ready-to-use editor builds and the CKEditor 5 Framework upon which the builds are based.
The easiest way to use CKEditor 5 in your Vue.js application is by choosing one of the rich text editor builds and simply passing it to the configuration of the Vue.js component. Read more about this solution in the Quick start section of this guide.
Additionally, you can integrate CKEditor 5 from source which is a much more flexible and powerful solution, but requires some additional configuration.
The watchdog feature is available for the React and Angular integrations, but is not supported in Vue yet.
# Quick start
Install the CKEditor 5 WYSIWYG editor component for Vue.js and the editor build of your choice.
Assuming that you picked @ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic
:
npm install --save @ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue @ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic
You now need to enable the CKEditor component in your application. There are 2 ways to do so:
Optionally, you can use the component locally.
# Direct script include
This is the quickest way to start using CKEditor in your project. Assuming Vue is installed, include the <script>
tags for the WYSIWYG editor component and the build:
<script src="../node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic/build/ckeditor.js"></script>
<script src="../node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue/dist/ckeditor.js"></script>
Enable the component globally in your application using the application instance:
Vue.createApp( { /* options */ } ).use( CKEditor ).mount( /* DOM element */ );
Instead of calling the use()
method to install CKEditor component globally, you can always use the component locally.
Use the <ckeditor>
component in your template:
- The
editor
directive specifies the editor build. - The
v-model
directive enables an out–of–the–box two–way data binding. - The
config
directive helps you pass the configuration to the editor instance.
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
</div>
Vue.createApp( {
data() {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>',
editorConfig: {
// The configuration of the editor.
}
}
} ).use( CKEditor ).mount( '#app' );
Voilà! You should see CKEditor 5 running in your Vue.js app.
See the list of supported directives and events that will help you configure the component.
# Using ES6 modules
The editor component comes as a UMD module, which makes it possible to use in various environments, for instance, applications generated by Vue CLI, built using webpack, etc.
To create an editor instance, you must first import the editor build and the component modules into the root file of your application (e.g. main.js
when generated by Vue CLI). Then, enable the component using the application instance:
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import CKEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue';
createApp( { /* options */ } ).use( CKEditor ).mount( /* DOM element */ );
Instead of calling the use()
method to install CKEditor component globally, you can always use the component locally.
The following example showcases a single–file component of the application. Use the <ckeditor>
component in your template:
- The
editor
directive specifies the editor build (the editor constructor). - The
v-model
directive enables an out–of–the–box two–way data binding. - The
config
directive helps you pass the configuration to the editor instance.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>',
editorConfig: {
// The configuration of the editor.
}
};
}
}
</script>
See the list of the supported directives and events that will help you configure the component.
# Using the component locally
If you do not want the CKEditor component to be enabled globally, you can skip the use()
part entirely. Instead, configure it in the components
property of your view.
Make sure CKEditor
and ClassicEditor
are accessible depending on the integration scenario: as direct script includes or ES6 module imports.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" ... ></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'app',
components: {
// Use the <ckeditor> component in this view.
ckeditor: CKEditor.component
},
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
// ...
};
}
}
</script>
# Integrating a build from the online builder
This guide assumes that you have created a zip archive with the editor built using the CKEditor 5 online builder.
Unpack it into you application main directory. The directory with the editor’s build cannot be placed inside the src/
directory as Node will return an error. Because of that, we recommend placing the directory next to the src/
and node_modules/
folders:
├── ckeditor5
│ ├── build
│ ├── sample
│ ├── src
│ ├── ...
│ ├── package.json
│ └── webpack.config.js
├── node_modules
├── public
├── src
├── ...
└── package.json
Then, add the package located in the ckeditor5
directory as a dependency of your project:
yarn add file:./ckeditor5
Finally, import the build in your application:
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import Editor from 'ckeditor5-custom-build/build/ckeditor';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: Editor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>',
editorConfig: {
// The configuration of the editor.
}
};
}
}
</script>
# Using CKEditor from source
Integrating the rich text editor from source allows you to use the full power of the CKEditor 5 Framework.
This guide assumes that you are using Vue CLI 4.5.0+ as your boilerplate and your application has been created using the vue create
command.
Learn more about building CKEditor from source in the Integrating the editor from the source guide.
# Configuring vue.config.js
To build CKEditor with your application, certain changes must be made to the default project configuration.
First, install the necessary dependencies:
npm install --save \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-utils \
postcss-loader@4 \
raw-loader@4
Edit the vue.config.js
file and use the following configuration. If the file is not present, create it in the root of the application (i.e. next to package.json
):
const path = require( 'path' );
const CKEditorWebpackPlugin = require( '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin' );
const { styles } = require( '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-utils' );
module.exports = {
// The source of CKEditor is encapsulated in ES6 modules. By default, the code
// from the node_modules directory is not transpiled, so you must explicitly tell
// the CLI tools to transpile JavaScript files in all ckeditor5-* modules.
transpileDependencies: [
/ckeditor5-[^/\\]+[/\\]src[/\\].+\.js$/,
],
configureWebpack: {
plugins: [
// CKEditor needs its own plugin to be built using webpack.
new CKEditorWebpackPlugin( {
// See https://ckeditor.com/docs/ckeditor5/latest/features/ui-language.html
language: 'en',
// Append translations to the file matching the `app` name.
translationsOutputFile: /app/
} )
]
},
// Vue CLI would normally use its own loader to load .svg and .css files, however:
// 1. The icons used by CKEditor must be loaded using raw-loader,
// 2. The CSS used by CKEditor must be transpiled using PostCSS to load properly.
chainWebpack: config => {
// (1.) To handle the editor icons, get the default rule for *.svg files first:
const svgRule = config.module.rule( 'svg' );
// Then you can either:
//
// * clear all loaders for existing 'svg' rule:
//
// svgRule.uses.clear();
//
// * or exclude ckeditor directory from node_modules:
svgRule.exclude.add( path.join( __dirname, 'node_modules', '@ckeditor' ) );
// Add an entry for *.svg files belonging to CKEditor. You can either:
//
// * modify the existing 'svg' rule:
//
// svgRule.use( 'raw-loader' ).loader( 'raw-loader' );
//
// * or add a new one:
config.module
.rule( 'cke-svg' )
.test( /ckeditor5-[^/\\]+[/\\]theme[/\\]icons[/\\][^/\\]+\.svg$/ )
.use( 'raw-loader' )
.loader( 'raw-loader' );
// (2.) Transpile the .css files imported by the editor using PostCSS.
// Make sure only the CSS belonging to ckeditor5-* packages is processed this way.
config.module
.rule( 'cke-css' )
.test( /ckeditor5-[^/\\]+[/\\].+\.css$/ )
.use( 'postcss-loader' )
.loader( 'postcss-loader' )
.tap( () => {
return {
postcssOptions: styles.getPostCssConfig( {
themeImporter: {
themePath: require.resolve( '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-theme-lark' ),
},
minify: true
} )
};
} );
}
};
By default, the Vue CLI uses file-loader
for all SVG files. The file-loader
copies the file to the output directory and resolves imports into URLs. The CKEditor’s UI components use SVG source directly so the theme icons must be loaded using raw-loader
. If your project uses different approach than CKEditor’s UI library you must create different webpack loader rules for your project’s SVG files and the CKEditor’s ones.
# Using the editor from source
Having configured vue.config.js
, you can choose the building blocks of your editor. Install the packages necessary for your integration, but please remember that all packages (excluding @ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-*
and @ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue
) must have the same version as the base editor package.
npm install --save \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-classic \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-essentials \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-link \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-paragraph \
@ckeditor/ckeditor5-theme-lark
You can use more packages, depending on which features are needed in your application.
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import CKEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue';
createApp( { /* options */ } ).use( CKEditor ).mount( /* DOM element */ );
Instead of calling the use()
method to install CKEditor component globally, you can always use the component locally.
Now all you need to do is specify the list of rich text editor options (including plugins) in the editorConfig
data property:
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
// ⚠️ NOTE: We don't use @ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic any more!
// Since we're building CKEditor from source, we use the source version of ClassicEditor.
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-editor-classic/src/classiceditor';
import EssentialsPlugin from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-essentials/src/essentials';
import BoldPlugin from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/bold';
import ItalicPlugin from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-basic-styles/src/italic';
import LinkPlugin from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-link/src/link';
import ParagraphPlugin from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-paragraph/src/paragraph';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>',
editorConfig: {
plugins: [
EssentialsPlugin,
BoldPlugin,
ItalicPlugin,
LinkPlugin,
ParagraphPlugin
],
toolbar: {
items: [
'bold',
'italic',
'link',
'undo',
'redo'
]
}
}
};
}
};
</script>
# Using the Document editor build
If you use the Document editor in your application, you need to manually add the editor toolbar to the DOM.
Since accessing the editor toolbar is not possible until after the editor instance is ready, put your toolbar insertion code in a method executed upon the ready
event of the component, like in the following example:
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @ready="onReady" ... ></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import DecoupledEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-decoupled-document';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: DecoupledEditor,
// ...
};
},
methods: {
onReady( editor ) {
// Insert the toolbar before the editable area.
editor.ui.getEditableElement().parentElement.insertBefore(
editor.ui.view.toolbar.element,
editor.ui.getEditableElement()
);
}
}
}
</script>
# Localization
CKEditor 5 supports multiple UI languages, and so does the official Vue.js component. Follow the instructions below to translate CKEditor 5 in your Vue.js application.
# Predefined builds
When using one of the official editor builds, you need to import the translations first.
- When using a direct script include:
<!-- Import translations for the German language. --> <script src="../node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic/build/translations/de.js"></script> <script src="../node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic/build/ckeditor.js"></script> <script src="../node_modules/@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue/dist/ckeditor.js"></script>
- When using ES6 modules:
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic'; // Import translations for the German language. import '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic/build/translations/de';
Then, configure the language of the editor in the component:
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>',
editorConfig: {
// Run the editor with the German UI.
language: 'de'
}
};
}
}
For more information, please refer to the Setting the UI language guide.
# CKEditor 5 built from source
Using the editor built from source requires you to modify the webpack configuration. Pass the language
(also additionalLanguages
) to the constructor of CKEditorWebpackPlugin
to localize your editor:
// vue.config.js
// ...
const CKEditorWebpackPlugin = require( '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-dev-webpack-plugin' );
// ...
module.exports = {
// ...
configureWebpack: {
plugins: [
// CKEditor needs its own plugin to be built using webpack.
new CKEditorWebpackPlugin( {
// The UI language. Language codes follow the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_639-1 format.
language: 'de',
// Append translations to the file matching the `app` name.
translationsOutputFile: /app/
} )
]
},
// ...
}
After building the application, CKEditor 5 will run with the UI translated to the specified language.
For more information, please refer to the “Setting UI language” guide.
# Component directives
# editor
This directive specifies the editor to be used by the component. It must directly reference the editor constructor to be used in the template.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" ... ></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
// ...
};
}
}
</script>
To use more than one rich text editor build in your application, you will need to configure it from source or use a “super build”.
# tag-name
By default, the editor component creates a <div>
container which is used as an element passed to the editor (e.g. ClassicEditor#element
). The element can be configured, so for example to create a <textarea>
, use the following directive:
<ckeditor :editor="editor" tag-name="textarea"></ckeditor>
# v-model
A standard directive for form inputs in Vue. Unlike model-value
, it creates a two–way data binding, which:
- sets the initial editor content,
- automatically updates the state of the application as the editor content changes (e.g. as the user types),
- can be used to set the editor content when necessary.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" v-model="editorData"></ckeditor>
<button @click="emptyEditor">Empty the editor</button>
<h2>Editor data</h2>
<code>{{ editorData }}</code>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>'
};
},
methods: {
emptyEditor() {
this.editorData = '';
}
}
}
</script>
In the above example, the editorData
property will be updated automatically as the user types and the content changes. It can also be used to change (as in emptyEditor()
) or set the initial content of the editor.
If you only want to execute an action when the editor data changes, use the input
event.
# model-value
Allows a one–way data binding that sets the content of the editor. Unlike v-model
, the value will not be updated when the content of the editor changes.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" :model-value="editorData"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorData: '<p>Content of the editor.</p>'
};
}
}
</script>
To execute an action when the editor data changes, use the input
event.
# config
Specifies the configuration of the editor.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" :config="editorConfig"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
editorConfig: {
toolbar: [ 'bold', 'italic', '|', 'link' ]
}
};
}
}
</script>
# disabled
This directive controls the isReadOnly
property of the editor.
It sets the initial read–only state of the editor and changes it during its lifecycle.
<template>
<div id="app">
<ckeditor :editor="editor" :disabled="editorDisabled"></ckeditor>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ClassicEditor from '@ckeditor/ckeditor5-build-classic';
export default {
name: 'app',
data() {
return {
editor: ClassicEditor,
// This editor will be read–only when created.
editorDisabled: true
};
}
}
</script>
# Component events
# ready
Corresponds to the ready
editor event.
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @ready="onEditorReady"></ckeditor>
# focus
Corresponds to the focus
editor event.
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @focus="onEditorFocus"></ckeditor>
# blur
Corresponds to the blur
editor event.
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @blur="onEditorBlur"></ckeditor>
# input
Corresponds to the change:data
editor event.
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @input="onEditorInput"></ckeditor>
# destroy
Corresponds to the destroy
editor event.
Note: Because the destruction of the editor is promise–driven, this event can be fired before the actual promise resolves.
<ckeditor :editor="editor" @destroy="onEditorDestroy"></ckeditor>
# Contributing and reporting issues
The source code of this component is available on GitHub in https://github.com/ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue.
Every day, we work hard to keep our documentation complete. Have you spotted an outdated information? Is something missing? Please report it via our issue tracker.