Reactivity API: Advanced 
shallowRef() 
Shallow version of ref().
- Type ts- function shallowRef<T>(value: T): ShallowRef<T> interface ShallowRef<T> { value: T }
- Details - Unlike - ref(), the inner value of a shallow ref is stored and exposed as-is, and will not be made deeply reactive. Only the- .valueaccess is reactive.- shallowRef()is typically used for performance optimizations of large data structures, or integration with external state management systems.
- Example js- const state = shallowRef({ count: 1 }) // does NOT trigger change state.value.count = 2 // does trigger change state.value = { count: 2 }
- See also 
triggerRef() 
Force trigger effects that depends on a shallow ref. This is typically used after making deep mutations to the inner value of a shallow ref.
- Type ts- function triggerRef(ref: ShallowRef): void
- Example js- const shallow = shallowRef({ greet: 'Hello, world' }) // Logs "Hello, world" once for the first run-through watchEffect(() => { console.log(shallow.value.greet) }) // This won't trigger the effect because the ref is shallow shallow.value.greet = 'Hello, universe' // Logs "Hello, universe" triggerRef(shallow)
customRef() 
Creates a customized ref with explicit control over its dependency tracking and updates triggering.
- Type ts- function customRef<T>(factory: CustomRefFactory<T>): Ref<T> type CustomRefFactory<T> = ( track: () => void, trigger: () => void ) => { get: () => T set: (value: T) => void }
- Details - customRef()expects a factory function, which receives- trackand- triggerfunctions as arguments and should return an object with- getand- setmethods.- In general, - track()should be called inside- get(), and- trigger()should be called inside- set(). However, you have full control over when they should be called, or whether they should be called at all.
- Example - Creating a debounced ref that only updates the value after a certain timeout after the latest set call: js- import { customRef } from 'vue' export function useDebouncedRef(value, delay = 200) { let timeout return customRef((track, trigger) => { return { get() { track() return value }, set(newValue) { clearTimeout(timeout) timeout = setTimeout(() => { value = newValue trigger() }, delay) } } }) }- Usage in component: vue- <script setup> import { useDebouncedRef } from './debouncedRef' const text = useDebouncedRef('hello') </script> <template> <input v-model="text" /> </template>
shallowReactive() 
Shallow version of reactive().
- Type ts- function shallowReactive<T extends object>(target: T): T
- Details - Unlike - reactive(), there is no deep conversion: only root-level properties are reactive for a shallow reactive object. Property values are stored and exposed as-is - this also means properties with ref values will not be automatically unwrapped.- Use with Caution - Shallow data structures should only be used for root level state in a component. Avoid nesting it inside a deep reactive object as it creates a tree with inconsistent reactivity behavior which can be difficult to understand and debug. 
- Example js- const state = shallowReactive({ foo: 1, nested: { bar: 2 } }) // mutating state's own properties is reactive state.foo++ // ...but does not convert nested objects isReactive(state.nested) // false // NOT reactive state.nested.bar++
shallowReadonly() 
Shallow version of readonly().
- Type ts- function shallowReadonly<T extends object>(target: T): Readonly<T>
- Details - Unlike - readonly(), there is no deep conversion: only root-level properties are made readonly. Property values are stored and exposed as-is - this also means properties with ref values will not be automatically unwrapped.- Use with Caution - Shallow data structures should only be used for root level state in a component. Avoid nesting it inside a deep reactive object as it creates a tree with inconsistent reactivity behavior which can be difficult to understand and debug. 
- Example js- const state = shallowReadonly({ foo: 1, nested: { bar: 2 } }) // mutating state's own properties will fail state.foo++ // ...but works on nested objects isReadonly(state.nested) // false // works state.nested.bar++
toRaw() 
Returns the raw, original object of a Vue-created proxy.
- Type ts- function toRaw<T>(proxy: T): T
- Details - toRaw()can return the original object from proxies created by- reactive(),- readonly(),- shallowReactive()or- shallowReadonly().- This is an escape hatch that can be used to temporarily read without incurring proxy access / tracking overhead or write without triggering changes. It is not recommended to hold a persistent reference to the original object. Use with caution. 
- Example js- const foo = {} const reactiveFoo = reactive(foo) console.log(toRaw(reactiveFoo) === foo) // true
markRaw() 
Marks an object so that it will never be converted to a proxy. Returns the object itself.
- Type ts- function markRaw<T extends object>(value: T): T
- Example js- const foo = markRaw({}) console.log(isReactive(reactive(foo))) // false // also works when nested inside other reactive objects const bar = reactive({ foo }) console.log(isReactive(bar.foo)) // false- Use with Caution - markRaw()and shallow APIs such as- shallowReactive()allow you to selectively opt-out of the default deep reactive/readonly conversion and embed raw, non-proxied objects in your state graph. They can be used for various reasons:- Some values simply should not be made reactive, for example a complex 3rd party class instance, or a Vue component object. 
- Skipping proxy conversion can provide performance improvements when rendering large lists with immutable data sources. 
 - They are considered advanced because the raw opt-out is only at the root level, so if you set a nested, non-marked raw object into a reactive object and then access it again, you get the proxied version back. This can lead to identity hazards - i.e. performing an operation that relies on object identity but using both the raw and the proxied version of the same object: js- const foo = markRaw({ nested: {} }) const bar = reactive({ // although `foo` is marked as raw, foo.nested is not. nested: foo.nested }) console.log(foo.nested === bar.nested) // false- Identity hazards are in general rare. However, to properly utilize these APIs while safely avoiding identity hazards requires a solid understanding of how the reactivity system works. 
effectScope() 
Creates an effect scope object which can capture the reactive effects (i.e. computed and watchers) created within it so that these effects can be disposed together. For detailed use cases of this API, please consult its corresponding RFC.
- Type ts- function effectScope(detached?: boolean): EffectScope interface EffectScope { run<T>(fn: () => T): T | undefined // undefined if scope is inactive stop(): void }
- Example js- const scope = effectScope() scope.run(() => { const doubled = computed(() => counter.value * 2) watch(doubled, () => console.log(doubled.value)) watchEffect(() => console.log('Count: ', doubled.value)) }) // to dispose all effects in the scope scope.stop()
getCurrentScope() 
Returns the current active effect scope if there is one.
- Type ts- function getCurrentScope(): EffectScope | undefined
onScopeDispose() 
Registers a dispose callback on the current active effect scope. The callback will be invoked when the associated effect scope is stopped.
This method can be used as a non-component-coupled replacement of onUnmounted in reusable composition functions, since each Vue component's setup() function is also invoked in an effect scope.
- Type ts- function onScopeDispose(fn: () => void): void