# VueJS 2
The `xlsx.core.min.js` and `xlsx.full.min.js` scripts are designed to be dropped
into web pages with script tags e.g.
```html
```
Strictly speaking, there should be no need for a Vue.JS demo! You can proceed
as you would with any other browser-friendly library.
This demo directly generates HTML using `sheet_to_html` and adds an element to
a pregenerated template. It also has a button for exporting as XLSX.
Other scripts in this demo show:
- server-rendered VueJS component (with `nuxt.js`)
- `weex` deployment for iOS
## Single File Components
For Single File Components, a simple `import XLSX from 'xlsx'` should suffice.
The webpack demo includes a sample `webpack.config.js`.
## WeeX
WeeX is a framework for building real mobile apps, akin to React Native. The
ecosystem is not quite as mature as React Native, missing basic features like
document access. As a result, this demo uses the `stream.fetch` API to upload
Base64-encoded documents to and download a precomputed
[Base64-encoded workbook](http://sheetjs.com/sheetjs.xlsx.b64).
Using NodeJS it is straightforward to convert to/from base64:
```js
/* convert sheetjs.xlsx -> sheetjs.xlsx.b64 */
var buf = fs.readFileSync("sheetjs.xlsx");
fs.writeFileSync("sheetjs.xlsx.b64", buf.toString("base64"));
/* convert sheetjs.xls.b64 -> sheetjs.xls */
var str = fs.readFileSync("sheetjs.xls.b64").toString();
fs.writeFileSync("sheetjs.xls", new Buffer(str, "base64"));
```
## Nuxt and State
The `nuxt.js` demo uses the same state approach as the React next.js demo:
```js
{
cols: [
{ name: "A", key: 0 },
{ name: "B", key: 1 },
{ name: "C", key: 2 },
],
data: [
[ "id", "name", "value" ],
[ 1, "sheetjs", 7262 ]
[ 2, "js-xlsx", 6969 ]
]
}
```
Due to webpack configuration issues on client/server bundles, the library should
be explicitly included in the layout HTML (as script tag) and in the component:
```js
const _XLSX = require('xlsx');
const X = typeof XLSX !== 'undefined' ? XLSX : _XLSX;
/* use the variable X rather than XLSX in the component */
```