Basic Svelte
Introduction
Bindings
Classes and styles
Advanced Svelte
Advanced reactivity
Motion
Advanced bindings
Advanced transitions
Context API
Special elements
<script module>
Next steps
Basic SvelteKit
Introduction
Routing
Loading data
Headers and cookies
Shared modules
API routes
$app/state
Errors and redirects
Advanced SvelteKit
Page options
Link options
Advanced routing
Advanced loading
Environment variables
Conclusion
Whereas Svelte is a component framework, SvelteKit is an app framework (or ‘metaframework’, depending on who you ask) that solves the tricky problems of building something production-ready:
- Routing
- Server-side rendering
- Data fetching
- Service workers
- TypeScript integration
- Prerendering
- Single-page apps
- Library packaging
- Optimised production builds
- Deploying to different hosting providers
- ...and so on
SvelteKit apps are server-rendered by default (like traditional ‘multi-page apps’ or MPAs) for excellent first load performance and SEO characteristics, but can then transition to client-side navigation (like modern ‘single-page apps’ or SPAs) to avoid jankily reloading everything (including things like third-party analytics code) when the user navigates. They can run anywhere JavaScript runs, though — as we’ll see — your users may not need to run any JavaScript at all.
If that sounds complicated, worry not: SvelteKit is the framework that grows with you! Start simple and add new features as you need them.
Project structure
On the right, in the file tree viewer, you’ll see a handful of files that SvelteKit expects to find in a project.
package.json
will be familiar if you’ve worked with Node.js before. It lists the project’s dependencies — including svelte
and @sveltejs/kit
— and a variety of scripts
for interacting with the SvelteKit CLI. (We’re currently running npm run dev
in the bottom window.)
Note that it also specifies
"type": "module"
, which means that.js
files are treated as native JavaScript modules by default, rather than the legacy CommonJS format.
svelte.config.js
contains your project configuration. We don’t need to worry about this file for now, but if you’re curious, visit the documentation.
vite.config.js
contains the Vite configuration. Because SvelteKit uses Vite, you can use Vite features like hot module replacement, TypeScript support, static asset handling and so on.
src
is where your app’s source code goes. src/app.html
is your page template (SvelteKit replaces the %sveltekit.head%
and %sveltekit.body%
as appropriate), and src/routes
defines the routes of your app.
Finally, static
contains any assets (like a favicon.png
or a robots.txt
) that should be included when your app is deployed.
<h1>Welcome to SvelteKit</h1>