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Public API of a component |
Public API of a component
Svelte uses the $props
rune to declare properties or props, which means describing the public interface of the component which becomes accessible to consumers of the component.
[!NOTE]
$props
is one of several runes, which are special hints for Svelte's compiler to make things reactive.
<script>
let { foo, bar, baz } = $props();
// Values that are passed in as props
// are immediately available
console.log({ foo, bar, baz });
</script>
You can specify a fallback value for a prop. It will be used if the component's consumer doesn't specify the prop on the component when instantiating the component, or if the passed value is undefined
at some point.
<script>
let { foo = 'optional default initial value' } = $props();
</script>
To get all properties, use rest syntax:
<script>
let { a, b, c, ...everythingElse } = $props();
</script>
You can use reserved words as prop names.
<script>
// creates a `class` property, even
// though it is a reserved word
let { class: className } = $props();
</script>
If you're using TypeScript, you can declare the prop types:
<script lang="ts">
interface Props {
required: string;
optional?: number;
[key: string]: unknown;
}
let { required, optional, ...everythingElse }: Props = $props();
</script>
If you're using JavaScript, you can declare the prop types using JSDoc:
<script>
/** @type {{ x: string }} */
let { x } = $props();
// or use @typedef if you want to document the properties:
/**
* @typedef {Object} MyProps
* @property {string} y Some documentation
*/
/** @type {MyProps} */
let { y } = $props();
</script>
If you export a const
, class
or function
, it is readonly from outside the component.
<script>
export const thisIs = 'readonly';
export function greet(name) {
alert(`hello ${name}!`);
}
</script>
Readonly props can be accessed as properties on the element, tied to the component using bind:this
syntax.
Reactive variables
To change component state and trigger a re-render, just assign to a locally declared variable that was declared using the $state
rune.
Update expressions (count += 1
) and property assignments (obj.x = y
) have the same effect.
<script>
let count = $state(0);
function handleClick() {
// calling this function will trigger an
// update if the markup references `count`
count = count + 1;
}
</script>
Svelte's <script>
blocks are run only when the component is created, so assignments within a <script>
block are not automatically run again when a prop updates.
<script>
let { person } = $props();
// this will only set `name` on component creation
// it will not update when `person` does
let { name } = person;
</script>
If you'd like to react to changes to a prop, use the $derived
or $effect
runes instead.
<script>
let count = $state(0);
let double = $derived(count * 2);
$effect(() => {
if (count > 10) {
alert('Too high!');
}
});
</script>
For more information on reactivity, read the documentation around runes.