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---
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title: Template syntax
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---
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Rather than reinventing the wheel, Svelte templates are built on foundations that have stood the test of time: HTML, CSS and JavaScript. There's very little extra stuff to learn.
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### Tags
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Tags allow you to bind data to your template. Whenever your data changes (for example after `component.a = 3`), the DOM updates automatically. You can use any JavaScript expression in templates, and it will also automatically update:
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```html
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<!-- { title: 'Template tags' } -->
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<p>{a} + {b} = {a + b}</p>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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"a": 1,
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"b": 2
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}
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```
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You can also use tags in attributes:
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```html
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<!-- { title: 'Tags in attributes' } -->
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<h1 style="color: {color};">{color}</h1>
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<p hidden={hideParagraph}>You can hide this paragraph.</p>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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color: "steelblue",
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hideParagraph: false
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}
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```
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[Boolean attributes](https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/infrastructure.html#sec-boolean-attributes) like `hidden` will be omitted if the tag expression evaluates to false. Attributes will be removed from the element if their value is `undefined` or `null`.
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### HTML
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Ordinary tags render expressions as plain text. If you need your expression interpreted as HTML, wrap it in a special `@html` tag:
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```html
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<!-- { title: 'Triple tags' } -->
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<p>This HTML: {content}</p>
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<p>Renders as: {@html content}</p>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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content: "Some <b>bold</b> text."
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}
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```
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As with regular tags, you can use any JavaScript expression in HTML tags, and it will automatically update the document when your data changes.
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> HTML is **not** sanitized before it is rendered! If you are displaying user input, you are responsible for first sanitizing it. Not doing so potentially opens you up to XSS attacks.
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### If blocks
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Control whether or not part of your template is rendered by wrapping it in an if block.
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```html
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<!-- { repl: false } -->
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{#if user.loggedIn}
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<a href="/logout">log out</a>
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{/if}
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{#if !user.loggedIn}
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<a href="/login">log in</a>
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{/if}
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```
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You can combine the two blocks above with `{:else}`:
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```html
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<!-- { repl: false } -->
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{#if user.loggedIn}
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<a href="/logout">log out</a>
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{:else}
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<a href="/login">log in</a>
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{/if}
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```
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You can also use `{:elseif ...}`:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'If, else and elseif' }-->
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{#if x > 10}
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<p>{x} is greater than 10</p>
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{:elseif 5 > x}
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<p>{x} is less than 5</p>
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{:else}
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<p>{x} is between 5 and 10</p>
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{/if}
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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x: 7
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}
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```
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### Each blocks
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Iterate over lists of data:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Each blocks' }-->
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<h1>Cats of YouTube</h1>
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<ul>
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{#each cats as cat}
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<li><a target="_blank" href={cat.video}>{cat.name}</a></li>
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{:else}
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<li>No cats :(</li>
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{/each}
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</ul>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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cats: [
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{
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name: "Keyboard Cat",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J---aiyznGQ"
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},
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{
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name: "Maru",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_AbfPXTKms"
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},
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{
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name: "Henri The Existential Cat",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUtn3pvWmpg"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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Else is triggered when the list is empty.
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You can access the index of the current element with *expression* as *name*, *index*:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Each block indexes' }-->
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<div class="grid">
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{#each rows as row, y}
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<div class="row">
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{#each columns as column, x}
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<code class="cell">
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{x + 1},{y + 1}:
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<strong>{row[column]}</strong>
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</code>
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{/each}
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</div>
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{/each}
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</div>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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columns: ["foo", "bar", "baz"],
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rows: [
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{ foo: "a", bar: "b", baz: "c" },
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{ foo: "d", bar: "e", baz: "f" },
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{ foo: "g", bar: "h", baz: "i" }
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]
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}
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```
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> By default, if the list `a, b, c` becomes `a, c`, Svelte will *remove* the third block and *change* the second from `b` to `c`, rather than removing `b`. If that's not what you want, use a [keyed each block](guide#keyed-each-blocks).
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You can use destructuring patterns on the elements of the array:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Each block destructuring' }-->
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<h1>It's the cats of YouTube again</h1>
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<ul>
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{#each cats as {name, video} }
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<li><a target="_blank" href={video}>{name}</a></li>
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{/each}
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</ul>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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cats: [
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{
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name: "Keyboard Cat",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J---aiyznGQ"
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},
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{
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name: "Maru",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_AbfPXTKms"
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},
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{
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name: "Henri The Existential Cat",
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video: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUtn3pvWmpg"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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### Await blocks
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You can represent the three states of a [Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) — pending, fulfilled and rejected — with an `await` block:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Await blocks' }-->
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<script>
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const promise = new Promise(fulfil => {
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setTimeout(() => fulfil(42), 3000);
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});
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</script>
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{#await promise}
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<p>wait for it...</p>
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{:then answer}
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<p>the answer is {answer}!</p>
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{:catch error}
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<p>well that's odd</p>
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{/await}
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```
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If the expression in `{#await expression}` *isn't* a promise, Svelte skips ahead to the `then` section.
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### Directives
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Directives allow you to add special instructions for adding [event handlers](guide#event-handlers), [bindings](guide#bindings), [transitions](guide#transitions) and so on. We'll cover each of those in later stages of this guide – for now, all you need to know is that directives can be identified by the `:` character:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Element directives' }-->
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<p>Count: {count}</p>
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<button on:click="{() => count += 1}">+1</button>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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count: 0
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}
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```
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> Technically, the `:` character is used to denote namespaced attributes in HTML. These will *not* be treated as directives, if encountered.
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### Debug tags
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To inspect data as it changes and flows through your app, use a `{@debug ...}` tag:
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```html
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<!--{ title: 'Debug tags' }-->
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<input bind:value={name}>
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{@debug name}
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<h1>Hello {name}!</h1>
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```
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```json
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/* { hidden: true } */
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{
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name: 'world'
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}
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```
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This will log the value of `name` whenever it changes. If your devtools are open, changing `name` will pause execution and open the debugger.
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You can debug multiple values simultaneously (`{@debug foo, bar, baz}`), or use `{@debug}` to pause execution whenever the surrounding markup is updated.
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> Debug tags only have an effect when compiling with the `dev: true` compiler option.
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