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Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5

You're reading from   Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5 Bring the frontend and backend together with Vue, Vuex, and Laravel

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299589
Length 376 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Anthony Gore Anthony Gore
Author Profile Icon Anthony Gore
Anthony Gore
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello Vue – An Introduction to Vue.js FREE CHAPTER 2. Prototyping Vuebnb, Your First Vue.js Project 3. Setting Up a Laravel Development Environment 4. Building a Web Service with Laravel 5. Integrating Laravel and Vue.js with Webpack 6. Composing Widgets with Vue.js Components 7. Building a Multi-Page App with Vue Router 8. Managing Your Application State with Vuex 9. Adding a User Login and API Authentication with Passport 10. Deploying a Full-Stack App to the Cloud

Migration


A migration is a special class that contains a set of actions to run against the database, such as creating or modifying a database table. Migrations ensure your database gets set up identically every time you create a new instance of your app, for example, installing in production or on a teammate's machine.

To create a new migration, use the make:migration Artisan CLI command. The argument of the command should be a snake-cased description of what the migration will do:

$ php artisan make:migration create_listings_table

You'll now see your new migration in the database/migrations directory. You'll notice the filename has a prefixed timestamp, such as 2017_06_20_133317_create_listings_table.php. The timestamp allows Laravel to determine the proper order of the migrations, in case it needs to run more than one at a time.

Your new migration declares a class that extends Migration. It overrides two methods: up, which is used to add new tables, columns, or indexes to your database; and...

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