The electric field in phasor notation is often written \begin{align} \mathbf{E}(x,y,z,t)&=\Re\{\mathbf{E}_0\mathrm{e}^{j\phi}\mathrm{e}^{j\omega t}\}\\ &=\Re\{\tilde{\mathbf{E}}\mathrm{e}^{j\omega t}\}. \end{align} Does it mean $\mathbf E_0$ is a constant vector, i.e. $$\mathbf E_0=E_{0x}\mathbf{\hat{x}}+E_{0y}\mathbf{\hat{y}}+E_{0z}\mathbf{\hat{z}}?$$
Or a vector field, $\mathbf E_0:\mathbb R^3\rightarrow \mathbb R^3$, i.e. $$ \mathbf{E}_0(x,y,z)=E_{0x}(x,y,z)\mathbf{\hat x}+E_{0y}(x,y,z)\mathbf{\hat y}+E_{0z}(x,y,z)\mathbf{\hat z}? $$