Appearance
Create Blocks (CMS) ​
Make sure, you've created a new file as described in customize components.
Next, import the correct type for your block and use it to define the content
property:
vue
<!-- components/cms/CmsBlockImageThreeColumn.vue -->
<script setup lang="ts">
import { CmsBlockImageThreeColumn } from "@shopware-pwa/composables-next";
const props = defineProps<{
content: CmsBlockImageThreeColumn;
}>();
</script>
Slots ​
Only for cms-base
package
Also here, if you are not using the cms-base
package, you have to come up with your own implementation of a generic component that handles the slot resolution. In that case, please ignore the mentions of CmsGenericElement
.
Since blocks are usually layouts, they have slots which can be filled with dynamic content - CMS elements. Since blocks are flexible, the specific type of the element is not known in advance.
For that reason, there's a generic element CmsGenericElement
which can be placed in every slot. It receives the content
configuration as its only prop.
Let's build the image-three-column
block, which has three slots - left
, center
and right
.
vue
<!-- components/cms/CmsBlockImageThreeColumn.vue -->
<template>
<div class="grid grid-cols-3">
<CmsGenericElement
:content="props.content.slots.filter(
(slot) => slot.slot === 'left')
" />
<CmsGenericElement
:content="props.content.slots.filter(
(slot) => slot.slot === 'center')
" />
<CmsGenericElement
:content="props.content.slots.filter(
(slot) => slot.slot === 'right')
" />
</div>
</template>
That works, but it's quite repetiive and hard to read. So we can use another composable useCmsBlock
which makes our lives way easier.
vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { CmsBlockImageThreeColumn } from "@shopware-pwa/composables-next";
const props = defineProps<{
content: CmsBlockImageThreeColumn;
}>();
const { getSlotContent } = useCmsBlock(props.content);
const leftContent = getSlotContent("left");
const rightContent = getSlotContent("right");
const centerContent = getSlotContent("center");
</script>
<template>
<div class="grid grid-cols-3">
<CmsGenericElement :content="leftContent" />
<CmsGenericElement :content="centerContent" />
<CmsGenericElement :content="rightContent" />
</div>
</template>
No you can go ahead and override blocks and elements step by step.