Template Syntax
Component Directives
on:*eventname*
Components can emit events using createEventDispatcher, or by forwarding DOM events. Listening for component events looks the same as listening for DOM events:
As with DOM events, if the on:
directive is used without a value, the component will forward the event, meaning that a consumer of the component can listen for it.
--style-props
You can also pass styles as props to components for the purposes of theming, using CSS custom properties.
Svelte's implementation is essentially syntactic sugar for adding a wrapper element. This example:
Desugars to this:
Note: Since this is an extra <div>
, beware that your CSS structure might accidentally target this. Be mindful of this added wrapper element when using this feature.
Svelte's CSS Variables support allows for easily themable components:
So you can set a high level theme color:
Or override it at the consumer level:
bind:_property_
You can bind to component props using the same syntax as for elements.
bind:this
Components also support bind:this
, allowing you to interact with component instances programmatically.
Note that we can't do {cart.empty}
since cart
is undefined
when the button is first rendered and throws an error.
<slot>
Components can have child content, in the same way that elements can.
The content is exposed in the child component using the <slot>
element, which can contain fallback content that is rendered if no children are provided.
<slot name="
name">
Named slots allow consumers to target specific areas. They can also have fallback content.
Components can be placed in a named slot using the syntax <Component slot="name" />
.
In order to place content in a slot without using a wrapper element, you can use the special element <svelte:fragment>
.
$$slots
$$slots
is an object whose keys are the names of the slots passed into the component by the parent. If the parent does not pass in a slot with a particular name, that name will not be present in $$slots
. This allows components to render a slot (and other elements, like wrappers for styling) only if the parent provides it.
Note that explicitly passing in an empty named slot will add that slot's name to $$slots
. For example, if a parent passes <div slot="title" />
to a child component, $$slots.title
will be truthy within the child.
<slot key={
value}>
Slots can be rendered zero or more times, and can pass values back to the parent using props. The parent exposes the values to the slot template using the let:
directive.
The usual shorthand rules apply — let:item
is equivalent to let:item={item}
, and <slot {item}>
is equivalent to <slot item={item}>
.
Named slots can also expose values. The let:
directive goes on the element with the slot
attribute.
<svelte:self>
The <svelte:self>
element allows a component to include itself, recursively.
It cannot appear at the top level of your markup; it must be inside an if or each block or passed to a component's slot to prevent an infinite loop.
<svelte:component>
The <svelte:component>
element renders a component dynamically, using the component constructor specified as the this
property. When the property changes, the component is destroyed and recreated.
If this
is falsy, no component is rendered.
<svelte:element>
The <svelte:element>
element lets you render an element of a dynamically specified type. This is useful for example when rich text content from a CMS. If the tag is changed, the children will be preserved unless there's a transition attached to the element. Any properties and event listeners present will be applied to the element.
The only supported binding is bind:this
, since the element type specific bindings that Svelte does at build time (e.g. bind:value
for input elements) does not work with a dynamic tag type.
If this
has a nullish value, a warning will be logged in development mode.
<svelte:window>
The <svelte:window>
element allows you to add event listeners to the window
object without worrying about removing them when the component is destroyed, or checking for the existence of window
when server-side rendering.
Unlike <svelte:self>
, this element may only appear the top level of your component and must never be inside a block or element.
You can also bind to the following properties:
innerWidth
innerHeight
outerWidth
outerHeight
scrollX
scrollY
online
— an alias for window.navigator.onLine
All except scrollX
and scrollY
are readonly.
Note that the page will not be scrolled to the initial value to avoid accessibility issues. Only subsequent changes to the bound variable of scrollX
and scrollY
will cause scrolling. However, if the scrolling behaviour is desired, call scrollTo()
in onMount()
.
<svelte:body>
Similarly to <svelte:window>
, this element allows you to add listeners to events on document.body
, such as mouseenter
and mouseleave
, which don't fire on window
. It also lets you use actions on the <body>
element.
As with <svelte:window>
, this element may only appear the top level of your component and must never be inside a block or element.
<svelte:head>
This element makes it possible to insert elements into document.head
. During server-side rendering, head
content is exposed separately to the main html
content.
As with <svelte:window>
and <svelte:body>
, this element may only appear at the top level of your component and must never be inside a block or element.
<svelte:options>
The <svelte:options>
element provides a place to specify per-component compiler options, which are detailed in the compiler section. The possible options are:
immutable={true}
— you never use mutable data, so the compiler can do simple referential equality checks to determine if values have changedimmutable={false}
— the default. Svelte will be more conservative about whether or not mutable objects have changedaccessors={true}
— adds getters and setters for the component's propsaccessors={false}
— the defaultnamespace="..."
— the namespace where this component will be used, most commonly "svg"; use the "foreign" namespace to opt out of case-insensitive attribute names and HTML-specific warningstag="..."
— the name to use when compiling this component as a custom element
<svelte:fragment>
The <svelte:fragment>
element allows you to place content in a named slot without wrapping it in a container DOM element. This keeps the flow layout of your document intact.