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title |
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svelte |
The svelte
package exposes lifecycle functions and the context API.
onMount
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#onMount
The onMount
function schedules a callback to run as soon as the component has been mounted to the DOM. It must be called during the component's initialisation (but doesn't need to live inside the component; it can be called from an external module).
onMount
does not run inside a server-side component.
<script>
import { onMount } from 'svelte';
onMount(() => {
console.log('the component has mounted');
});
</script>
If a function is returned from onMount
, it will be called when the component is unmounted.
<script>
import { onMount } from 'svelte';
onMount(() => {
const interval = setInterval(() => {
console.log('beep');
}, 1000);
return () => clearInterval(interval);
});
</script>
This behaviour will only work when the function passed to
onMount
synchronously returns a value.async
functions always return aPromise
, and as such cannot synchronously return a function.
beforeUpdate
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#beforeUpdate
Schedules a callback to run immediately before the component is updated after any state change.
The first time the callback runs will be before the initial
onMount
<script>
import { beforeUpdate } from 'svelte';
beforeUpdate(() => {
console.log('the component is about to update');
});
</script>
afterUpdate
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#afterUpdate
Schedules a callback to run immediately after the component has been updated.
The first time the callback runs will be after the initial
onMount
<script>
import { afterUpdate } from 'svelte';
afterUpdate(() => {
console.log('the component just updated');
});
</script>
onDestroy
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#onDestroy
Schedules a callback to run immediately before the component is unmounted.
Out of onMount
, beforeUpdate
, afterUpdate
and onDestroy
, this is the only one that runs inside a server-side component.
<script>
import { onDestroy } from 'svelte';
onDestroy(() => {
console.log('the component is being destroyed');
});
</script>
tick
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#tick
Returns a promise that resolves once any pending state changes have been applied, or in the next microtask if there are none.
<script>
import { beforeUpdate, tick } from 'svelte';
beforeUpdate(async () => {
console.log('the component is about to update');
await tick();
console.log('the component just updated');
});
</script>
setContext
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#setContext
Associates an arbitrary context
object with the current component and the specified key
and returns that object. The context is then available to children of the component (including slotted content) with getContext
.
Like lifecycle functions, this must be called during component initialisation.
<script>
import { setContext } from 'svelte';
setContext('answer', 42);
</script>
Context is not inherently reactive. If you need reactive values in context then you can pass a store into context, which will be reactive.
getContext
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#getContext
Retrieves the context that belongs to the closest parent component with the specified key
. Must be called during component initialisation.
<script>
import { getContext } from 'svelte';
const answer = getContext('answer');
</script>
hasContext
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#hasContext
Checks whether a given key
has been set in the context of a parent component. Must be called during component initialisation.
<script>
import { hasContext } from 'svelte';
if (hasContext('answer')) {
// do something
}
</script>
getAllContexts
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#getAllContexts
Retrieves the whole context map that belongs to the closest parent component. Must be called during component initialisation. Useful, for example, if you programmatically create a component and want to pass the existing context to it.
<script>
import { getAllContexts } from 'svelte';
const contexts = getAllContexts();
</script>
createEventDispatcher
EXPORT_SNIPPET: svelte#createEventDispatcher
Creates an event dispatcher that can be used to dispatch component events. Event dispatchers are functions that can take two arguments: name
and detail
.
Component events created with createEventDispatcher
create a CustomEvent. These events do not bubble. The detail
argument corresponds to the CustomEvent.detail property and can contain any type of data.
<script>
import { createEventDispatcher } from 'svelte';
const dispatch = createEventDispatcher();
</script>
<button on:click={() => dispatch('notify', 'detail value')}>Fire Event</button>
Events dispatched from child components can be listened to in their parent. Any data provided when the event was dispatched is available on the detail
property of the event object.
<script>
function callbackFunction(event) {
console.log(`Notify fired! Detail: ${event.detail}`);
}
</script>
<Child on:notify={callbackFunction} />
Events can be cancelable by passing a third parameter to the dispatch function. The function returns false
if the event is cancelled with event.preventDefault()
, otherwise it returns true
.
<script>
import { createEventDispatcher } from 'svelte';
const dispatch = createEventDispatcher();
function notify() {
const shouldContinue = dispatch('notify', 'detail value', { cancelable: true });
if (shouldContinue) {
// no one called preventDefault
} else {
// a listener called preventDefault
}
}
</script>
You can type the event dispatcher to define which events it can receive. This will make your code more type safe both within the component (wrong calls are flagged) and when using the component (types of the events are now narrowed). See here how to do it.
Types
TYPES: svelte