For the sake of this guide, let’s start with a fresh Nuxt.js project called `my-tiptap-project`. The following command sets up everything we need. It asks a lot of questions, but just use what floats your boat or use the defaults.
Okay, enough of the boring boilerplate work. Let’s finally install Tiptap! For the following example you’ll need the `@tiptap/vue-2` package, with a few components, and `@tiptap/starter-kit` which has the most common extensions to get started quickly.
If you followed step 1 and 2, you can now start your project with `npm run serve`, and open [http://localhost:8080/](http://localhost:8080/) in your favorite browser. This might be different, if you’re working with an existing project.
To actually start using Tiptap, you’ll need to add a new component to your app. Let’s call it `TiptapEditor` and put the following example code in `components/TiptapEditor.vue`.
This is the fastest way to get Tiptap up and running with Vue. It will give you a very basic version of Tiptap, without any buttons. No worries, you will be able to add more functionality soon.
Note that Tiptap needs to run in the client, not on the server. It’s required to wrap the editor in a `<client-only>` tag. [Read more about client-only components.](https://nuxtjs.org/api/components-client-only)
You’re probably used to bind your data with `v-model` in forms, that’s also possible with Tiptap. Here is a working example component, that you can integrate in your project: