I'm shuffling an array and getting a weird message in the console.
My JSON file looks like this:
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Sushi",
"image": "https://images.pexels.com/photos/1640777/pexels-photo-1640777.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&dpr=1&w=500",
"price": 7.99,
"restaurant": "Sushi Garden",
"city": "Burnaby",
"googleMap": "https://www.google.com",
"keywords": "Lorem ipsum",
"onlineOrders": {
"foodly": "https://www.google.com",
"doorDash": "https://www.daum.net",
"skipTheDish": "https://www.naver.com"
}
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Noodle",
"image": "https://images.pexels.com/photos/1640777/pexels-photo-1640777.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&dpr=1&w=500",
"price": 7.99,
"restaurant": "Restaurant Name",
"city": "Burnaby",
"googleMap": "https://www.google.com",
"keywords": "Lorem ipsum",
"onlineOrders": {
"foodly": "https://www.google.com"
}
},
...
And this is my component that shuffles the array of food objects.
import foods from "/json/foods.json";
import _ from "lodash";
...
created: function () {
this.retrievedFoods = foods;
this.randomizeFoodsOrder();
},
data() {
return {
retrievedFoods: [],
};
},
methods: {
randomizeFoodsOrder() {
let temp = foods;
console.log(temp); // Array
this.retrievedFoods = _.shuffle(temp);
console.log(this.retrievedFoods); // Proxy????
},
...
However, I'm getting this Proxy
thing on console log after shuffling.
What could be the issue here? What is changing this to Proxy?
TLDR: The console still shows the expected values and you still interact with the variable the same as if it did not say Proxy.
A proxy is a powerful JavaScript ES6 feature which allows you to intercept any interaction with a target object and execute custom behavior. If you are familiar with event listeners, you can think of a proxy as a sort of event listener for object interaction.
The Vue 3 guide on reactivity explains proxies like this:
a Proxy is an object that encases another object or function and allows you to intercept it.
Proxies are stealthy "wrapper" objects which can intercept not just write events to a target (i.e. object mutations/changes) but even read events as well (i.e. merely reading a property value). This capability is how Vue 3 implements reactivity on reactive
variables, by using proxies to track data changes and trigger updates. (In Vue 2 this was done with getters and setters.)
All proxies have the Proxy label in the console to make you aware that the logged object has a proxy intercepting it. You can then click in the console to expand the proxy to see what it's doing. The target object can be found in the proxy's [[Target]]
property.
So what does this all change about the way you interact with reactive objects in Vue 3? Not much. You still interact with the target object the same way as if it had no proxy, there is no special syntax.