useCookie
Within your pages, components and plugins you can use useCookie, an SSR-friendly composable to read and write cookies.
const cookie = useCookie(name, options)
useCookie only works in the Nuxt context.useCookie ref will automatically serialize and deserialize cookie value to JSON.Example
The example below creates a cookie called counter. If the cookie doesn't exist, it is initially set to a random value. Whenever we update the counter variable, the cookie will be updated accordingly.
<script setup lang="ts">
const counter = useCookie('counter')
counter.value = counter.value || Math.round(Math.random() * 1000)
</script>
<template>
<div>
<h1>Counter: {{ counter || '-' }}</h1>
<button @click="counter = null">reset</button>
<button @click="counter--">-</button>
<button @click="counter++">+</button>
</div>
</template>
useCookie values manually when a cookie has changed with refreshCookie.Options
Cookie composable accepts several options which let you modify the behavior of cookies.
Most of the options will be directly passed to the cookie package.
maxAge / expires
Use these options to set the expiration of the cookie.
maxAge: Specifies the number (in seconds) to be the value for the Max-Age Set-Cookie attribute.
The given number will be converted to an integer by rounding down. By default, no maximum age is set.
expires: Specifies the Date object to be the value for the Expires Set-Cookie attribute.
By default, no expiration is set. Most clients will consider this a "non-persistent cookie" and will delete it on a condition like exiting a web browser application.
expires and maxAge is set, then maxAge takes precedence, but not all clients may obey this, so if both are set, they should point to the same date and time!expires and maxAge is set, the cookie will be session-only and removed when the user closes their browser.httpOnly
Specifies the boolean value for the HttpOnly Set-Cookie attribute. When truthy, the HttpOnly attribute is set; otherwise it is not. By default, the HttpOnly attribute is not set.
true, as compliant clients will not allow client-side JavaScript to see the cookie in document.cookie.secure
Specifies the boolean value for the Secure Set-Cookie attribute. When truthy, the Secure attribute is set; otherwise it is not. By default, the Secure attribute is not set.
true, as compliant clients will not send the cookie back to the server in the future if the browser does not have an HTTPS connection. This can lead to hydration errors.partitioned
Specifies the boolean value for the Partitioned Set-Cookie attribute. When truthy, the Partitioned attribute is set, otherwise it is not. By default, the Partitioned attribute is not set.
domain
Specifies the value for the Domain Set-Cookie attribute. By default, no domain is set, and most clients will consider applying the cookie only to the current domain.
path
Specifies the value for the Path Set-Cookie attribute. By default, the path is considered the "default path".
sameSite
Specifies the boolean or string value for the SameSite Set-Cookie attribute.
truewill set theSameSiteattribute toStrictfor strict same-site enforcement.falsewill not set theSameSiteattribute.'lax'will set theSameSiteattribute toLaxfor lax same-site enforcement.'none'will set theSameSiteattribute toNonefor an explicit cross-site cookie.'strict'will set theSameSiteattribute toStrictfor strict same-site enforcement.
More information about the different enforcement levels can be found in the specification.
encode
Specifies a function that will be used to encode a cookie's value. Since the value of a cookie has a limited character set (and must be a simple string), this function can be used to encode a value into a string suited for a cookie's value.
The default encoder is the JSON.stringify + encodeURIComponent.
decode
Specifies a function that will be used to decode a cookie's value. Since the value of a cookie has a limited character set (and must be a simple string), this function can be used to decode a previously encoded cookie value into a JavaScript string or other object.
The default decoder is decodeURIComponent + destr.
default
Specifies a function that returns the cookie's default value. The function can also return a Ref.
readonly
Allows accessing a cookie value without the ability to set it.
watch
Specifies the boolean or string value for watch cookie ref data.
true- Will watch cookie ref data changes and its nested properties (default).shallow- Will watch cookie ref data changes for only top level propertiesfalse- Will not watch cookie ref data changes.
useCookie values manually when a cookie has changed with refreshCookie.Example 1:
<script setup lang="ts">
const user = useCookie(
'userInfo',
{
default: () => ({ score: -1 }),
watch: false
}
)
if (user.value && user.value !== null) {
user.value.score++; // userInfo cookie not update with this change
}
</script>
<template>
<div>User score: {{ user?.score }}</div>
</template>
Example 2:
<script setup lang="ts">
const list = useCookie(
'list',
{
default: () => [],
watch: 'shallow'
}
)
function add() {
list.value?.push(Math.round(Math.random() * 1000))
// list cookie not update with this change
}
function save() {
if (list.value && list.value !== null) {
list.value = [...list.value]
// list cookie update with this change
}
}
</script>
<template>
<div>
<h1>List</h1>
<pre>{{ list }}</pre>
<button @click="add">Add</button>
<button @click="save">Save</button>
</div>
</template>
Cookies in API Routes
You can use getCookie and setCookie from h3 package to set cookies in server API routes.
export default defineEventHandler(event => {
// Read counter cookie
let counter = getCookie(event, 'counter') || 0
// Increase counter cookie by 1
setCookie(event, 'counter', ++counter)
// Send JSON response
return { counter }
})