3.1 KiB
title |
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Component directives |
on:eventname
<!--- copy: false --->
on:eventname={handler}
Components can emit events using createEventDispatcher
or by forwarding DOM events.
<script>
import { createEventDispatcher } from 'svelte';
const dispatch = createEventDispatcher();
</script>
<!-- programmatic dispatching -->
<button on:click={() => dispatch('hello')}> one </button>
<!-- declarative event forwarding -->
<button on:click> two </button>
Listening for component events looks the same as listening for DOM events:
<SomeComponent on:whatever={handler} />
As with DOM events, if the on:
directive is used without a value, the event will be forwarded, meaning that a consumer can listen for it.
<SomeComponent on:whatever />
--style-props
<!--- copy: false --->
--style-props="anycssvalue"
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:
<Slider bind:value min={0} --rail-color="black" --track-color="rgb(0, 0, 255)" />
Desugars to this:
<div style="display: contents; --rail-color: black; --track-color: rgb(0, 0, 255)">
<Slider bind:value min={0} max={100} />
</div>
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.
For SVG namespace, the example above desugars into using <g>
instead:
<g style="--rail-color: black; --track-color: rgb(0, 0, 255)">
<Slider bind:value min={0} max={100} />
</g>
Note: Since this is an extra <g>
, 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 themeable components:
<style>
.potato-slider-rail {
background-color: var(--rail-color, var(--theme-color, 'purple'));
}
</style>
So you can set a high-level theme color:
/* global.css */
html {
--theme-color: black;
}
Or override it at the consumer level:
<Slider --rail-color="goldenrod" />
bind:property
bind:property={variable}
You can bind to component props using the same syntax as for elements.
<Keypad bind:value={pin} />
While Svelte props are reactive without binding, that reactivity only flows downward into the component by default. Using bind:property
allows changes to the property from within the component to flow back up out of the component.
bind:this
<!--- copy: false --->
bind:this={component_instance}
Components also support bind:this
, allowing you to interact with component instances programmatically.
<ShoppingCart bind:this={cart} />
<button on:click={() => cart.empty()}> Empty shopping cart </button>
Note that we can't do
{cart.empty}
sincecart
isundefined
when the button is first rendered and throws an error.