Vue and Vite Retool the Entire Dev Chain for AI Agents
AI is rewriting application development. Vue and Vite are giving new answers.
AI no longer just completes code—it begins to read projects, modify files, run commands, build interfaces, and deploy entire applications with a single instruction.
As AI enters real engineering workflows, a more practical question emerges: how should frameworks, toolchains, deployment platforms, and the developer experience be redesigned?
Vue&ViteConf 2026 will be held in Shanghai on July 18. Ticket address: https://vueconf.cn
VoidZero Founder & CEO, and creator of Vue.js and Vite, Evan You, will attend and deliver a keynote. This time, we are not just talking about the present of Vue and Vite—we will also see their next stop in the AI era together.
Vue and Vite: Forming a Complete Path The label for Vite used to be "fast." But today's Vite ecosystem has gone far beyond that.
Rolldown, Oxc, Vitest, Vite Task, Vite+, Void—these tools are forming a complete path: from creating a project and starting development, to checking, testing, building, and cache optimization, and then to cloud deployment and AI Agent collaboration.
Void provides database, KV storage, AI inference, and authentication capabilities out of the box, with built-in Skills and MCP support, allowing Coding Agents to automatically build and launch complete applications via natural language instructions.
Vite+ uses a single global command vp plus a vite.config.ts to cover the entire toolchain from creation to deployment—not just for humans, but also for AI Agents.
The more unified the tools, the easier it is for AI to understand a project. The clearer the process, the less likely automation is to spiral out of control.
Four Main Tracks, One Intensive On-Site Answer
The conference has currently confirmed 11 speakers, structured around four main tracks:
1. The Evolution of the Vue and Vite Core Ecosystem
From Evan You's keynote, to Edison's deep dive into the Block mechanism and fine-grained updates of Vapor Mode, to shulaoda sharing memory optimization practices for Rolldown and Vite, and Wang Chi presenting the underlying implementation of Vite Task's caching mechanism—you will see how this ecosystem chain continues to move forward.
The progress of a toolchain is not in slogans. It hides in a single cache hit, in the minutes saved every day.
2. Vite Ecosystem in Practice: From Mini-Programs to Super Apps
Application scale presents challenges in two directions: refinement and expansion.
Yang Qiming brings a practical sharing of Weapp-vite—how to reconstruct the mini-program development experience using Rolldown, Vite, and Vue, combining MCP, Skills, and screenshot verification tools to demonstrate new possibilities for mini-program engineering in the AI era.
Mini-programs should not just be "good enough to run." Scaling up further presents another problem.
Zephyr Cloud platform engineer and core Module Federation ecosystem contributor Néstor López will demonstrate how to use Nuxt with Module Federation to allow multiple applications and multiple business lines to coexist seamlessly on the same host base—independently deployed, yet forming a unified whole. Microservices reshaped the backend; micro-frontends are doing the same to the frontend.
3. AI Agents and Developer Tools
Neko and RainbowBird will share how to use Velin to turn Prompts from strings into structured code, and use Vieval to make Agent Benchmarking as natural as daily testing.
DeepChat author Xi Yangzhen will review the real path of a Vue developer building an Agent Client.
Simon He will use markstream-vue as an example to clearly explain the real challenges of streaming Markdown rendering in AI products.
AI applications are not just about the model. The content generated by the model must eventually land in an interface—and whether the interface is stable is something users can see at a glance.
4. Expanding Vue's Boundaries: Going Native
ByteDance Lynx architect and former Meta React team member Hux (Huang Xuan) will bring an on-site exploration of "Vue + Lynx = Vue Native"—as AI begins to lower the barrier of engineering volume, this is finally no longer just a vision.
Why Come to the Event?
This is not a gathering that only talks about framework and tool updates.
It brings together several changes happening simultaneously: core ecosystem evolution, real-world scenario implementation, AI Agents reshaping engineering workflows, and Vue moving into more runtime environments. Individually, they are technical topics; together, they represent the change in how the next generation of applications will be developed.
If you care about Vue, Vite, AI Agents, full-stack deployment, developer toolchains, mini-program engineering, or if you are thinking about how to build applications better in the AI era—this conference is worth attending in person.
July 18th, see you there!