A Vue (2) plugin to track your Discord status using Lanyard API.
Lanyard is a service that makes it super easy to export your live Discord presence to an API endpoint and to a WebSocket for you to use wherever you want. This plugin creates a connection between Lanyard and your Vue app as a plugin and lets you access the $lanyard
anywhere in your app!
β¨ This plugin supports both REST and WebSocket methods.
You'll need Node.js and an existing Vue app to use this plugin (you can find an example vue-cli app in example/
).
- Download the module via NPM, Yarn or your package manager.
- For NPM:
npm install @eggsydev/vue-lanyard
- For Yarn:
yarn add @eggsydev/vue-lanyard
- For NPM:
After you download the plugin, you have to import it into your app with Vue.use()
. This will let you access the $lanyard
method anywhere in your app!
import Vue from "vue";
import VueLanyard from "@eggsydev/vue-lanyard";
Vue.use(VueLanyard);
// Rest of your Vue app configuration
And then you will have the access to $lanyard
method in your app.
export default {
// Call it on `mounted`
async mounted() {
const response = await this.$lanyard({
userId: "162969778699501569",
});
// Do whatever you want with Lanyard response object
},
};
Lanyard method allows you to choose between WebSocket and REST connection. In both cases, the userId
option is required. You can also have multiple IDs in array format.
/*
This will actually return multiple Lanyard objects in a single array.
Note:
I suggest you to use WebSocket connections when listening to
multiple users because this mode basically sends a different
request for each user at the same time.
*/
this.$lanyard({
userId: ["162969778699501569", "94490510688792576"],
});
If you want to use the WebSocket way and get changes in real-time, you can follow this example.
/*
Listening to WebSocket is a bit different but it's nothing
different than listening to a <WebSocket>
*/
const socket = await this.$lanyard({
userId: "162969778699501569",
socket: true,
});
// Set a listener for "message" event
socket.addEventListener("message", ({ data }) => {
const { d: status } = JSON.parse(data);
// Do whatever you want with `status`
});
β When using WebSocket, if you're using Vue Router, it won't close the socket connection even after you change the page, and if you return to the same page where you are connecting to socket, it will create another connection which will cause conflicts and unnecessary socket connections. You can use Vue's
beforeDestroy
hook to disconnect from the socket previous socket before leaving the page, checkexample/src/components/Lanyard/WebSocket.vue
for more details.
WebSockets are amazing, but do you actually need them? That depends on what you want to achieve. If you want to achieve these, you might want to go with WebSocket.
- You want real-time updates.
- You want to get presence data of multiple users but don't want separate requests for each user.
- You want something better and more performant than sending requests with
setInterval
.
If you only want to fetch data when the page loads and don't want to update it until another page refresh, you can go with REST (normal) method. It's up to you!
You can use this plugin the way you use Vue plugins (for client-side) in Nuxt.js!
// plugins/VueLanyard.js
import Vue from "vue";
import VueLanyard from "@eggsydev/vue-lanyard";
Vue.use(VueLanyard);
And reference that file in your nuxt.config
.
// nuxt.config.js
export default {
plugins: [
{
src: "@/plugins/VueLanyard",
mode: "client",
},
],
};
This plugin comes with type support. You can import types from @eggsydev/vue-lanyard/@types
and use them in your script.
- Phineas - Creator of Lanyard API
- Documents I followed online to create this plugin
MIT License Β© 2021 Abdulbaki Dursun