Basic markup
Markup inside a Svelte component can be thought of as HTML++.
Tags
A lowercase tag, like <div>
, denotes a regular HTML element. A capitalised tag or a tag that uses dot notation, such as <Widget>
or <my.stuff>
, indicates a component.
<script>
import Widget from './Widget.svelte';
</script>
<div>
<Widget />
</div>
Element attributes
By default, attributes work exactly like their HTML counterparts.
<div class="foo">
<button disabled>can't touch this</button>
</div>
As in HTML, values may be unquoted.
<input type=checkbox />
Attribute values can contain JavaScript expressions.
<a href="page/{p}">page {p}</a>
Or they can be JavaScript expressions.
<button disabled={!clickable}>...</button>
Boolean attributes are included on the element if their value is truthy and excluded if it’s falsy.
All other attributes are included unless their value is nullish (null
or undefined
).
<input required={false} placeholder="This input field is not required" />
<div title={null}>This div has no title attribute</div>
Quoting a singular expression does not affect how the value is parsed, but in Svelte 6 it will cause the value to be coerced to a string:
<button disabled="{number !== 42}">...</button>
When the attribute name and value match (name={name}
), they can be replaced with {name}
.
<button {disabled}>...</button>
<!-- equivalent to
<button disabled={disabled}>...</button>
-->
Component props
By convention, values passed to components are referred to as properties or props rather than attributes, which are a feature of the DOM.
As with elements, name={name}
can be replaced with the {name}
shorthand.
<Widget foo={bar} answer={42} text="hello" />
Spread attributes allow many attributes or properties to be passed to an element or component at once.
An element or component can have multiple spread attributes, interspersed with regular ones.
<Widget {...things} />
Events
Listening to DOM events is possible by adding attributes to the element that start with on
. For example, to listen to the click
event, add the onclick
attribute to a button:
<button onclick={() => console.log('clicked')}>click me</button>
Event attributes are case sensitive. onclick
listens to the click
event, onClick
listens to the Click
event, which is different. This ensures you can listen to custom events that have uppercase characters in them.
Because events are just attributes, the same rules as for attributes apply:
- you can use the shorthand form:
<button {onclick}>click me</button>
- you can spread them:
<button {...thisSpreadContainsEventAttributes}>click me</button>
Timing-wise, event attributes always fire after events from bindings (e.g. oninput
always fires after an update to bind:value
). Under the hood, some event handlers are attached directly with addEventListener
, while others are delegated.
When using ontouchstart
and ontouchmove
event attributes, the handlers are passive for better performance. This greatly improves responsiveness by allowing the browser to scroll the document immediately, rather than waiting to see if the event handler calls event.preventDefault()
.
In the very rare cases that you need to prevent these event defaults, you should use on
instead (for example inside an action).
Event delegation
To reduce memory footprint and increase performance, Svelte uses a technique called event delegation. This means that for certain events — see the list below — a single event listener at the application root takes responsibility for running any handlers on the event’s path.
There are a few gotchas to be aware of:
- when you manually dispatch an event with a delegated listener, make sure to set the
{ bubbles: true }
option or it won’t reach the application root - when using
addEventListener
directly, avoid callingstopPropagation
or the event won’t reach the application root and handlers won’t be invoked. Similarly, handlers added manually inside the application root will run before handlers added declaratively deeper in the DOM (with e.g.onclick={...}
), in both capturing and bubbling phases. For these reasons it’s better to use theon
function imported fromsvelte/events
rather thanaddEventListener
, as it will ensure that order is preserved andstopPropagation
is handled correctly.
The following event handlers are delegated:
beforeinput
click
change
dblclick
contextmenu
focusin
focusout
input
keydown
keyup
mousedown
mousemove
mouseout
mouseover
mouseup
pointerdown
pointermove
pointerout
pointerover
pointerup
touchend
touchmove
touchstart
Text expressions
A JavaScript expression can be included as text by surrounding it with curly braces.
{expression}
Curly braces can be included in a Svelte template by using their HTML entity strings: {
, {
, or {
for {
and }
, }
, or }
for }
.
If you’re using a regular expression (RegExp
) literal notation, you’ll need to wrap it in parentheses.
<h1>Hello {name}!</h1>
<p>{a} + {b} = {a + b}.</p>
<div>{(/^[A-Za-z ]+$/).test(value) ? x : y}</div>
The expression will be stringified and escaped to prevent code injections. If you want to render HTML, use the {@html}
tag instead.
{@html potentiallyUnsafeHtmlString}
Make sure that you either escape the passed string or only populate it with values that are under your control in order to prevent XSS attacks
Comments
You can use HTML comments inside components.
<!-- this is a comment! --><h1>Hello world</h1>
Comments beginning with svelte-ignore
disable warnings for the next block of markup. Usually, these are accessibility warnings; make sure that you’re disabling them for a good reason.
<!-- svelte-ignore a11y-autofocus -->
<input bind:value={name} autofocus />
You can add a special comment starting with @component
that will show up when hovering over the component name in other files.
<!--
@component
- You can use markdown here.
- You can also use code blocks here.
- Usage:
```html
<Main name="Arethra">
```
-->
<script>
let { name } = $props();
</script>
<main>
<h1>
Hello, {name}
</h1>
</main>