0👍
✅
I’ve changed my array
to include tours as a nested array in response.data
. So I could loop through it in select v-for
:
<div v-for="(item, index) in hosters" v-bind:key="item.id" class="col-md-6 mb-50">
<h4 class="mb-0">{{ item.name }} {{ item.lastname }}</h4>
<div class="tour-options-select">
<select id="select-suggestions" name="tour-options-dropdown" class="tour-options-dropdown">
<option v-for="tour in item.tours">{{ tour.title }}</option>
</select>
</div>
</div>
So I’m getting all users data into a single response and working based on it.
3👍
You’re using v-model="tour"
. Which means all the users share the same v-model
. You probably want to use a tours
model property which would hold an array matching your array of users. Or it could be an object, where you use the user.id
as key
.
i.e: v-model="tours[user.id]"
Another option (which probably makes more sense, I wouldn’t know without a minimal reproducible example), is to save each tour inside its respective user object and use v-model="user.tour"
. In which case, if you need all tours, you could use:
const allTours = users.map(u => ({id: u.id, tour: u.tour}))
👤tao
Source:stackexchange.com