Book Image

Real-World Svelte

By : Tan Li Hau
4.3 (4)
Book Image

Real-World Svelte

4.3 (4)
By: Tan Li Hau

Overview of this book

Svelte has quickly become a popular choice among developers seeking to build fast, responsive, and efficient web applications that are high-performing, scalable, and visually stunning. This book goes beyond the basics to help you thoroughly explore the core concepts that make Svelte stand out among other frameworks. You’ll begin by gaining a clear understanding of lifecycle functions, reusable hooks, and various styling options such as Tailwind CSS and CSS variables. Next, you’ll find out how to effectively manage the state, props, and bindings and explore component patterns for better organization. You’ll also discover how to create patterns using actions, demonstrate custom events, integrate vanilla JS UI libraries, and progressively enhance UI elements. As you advance, you’ll delve into state management with context and stores, implement custom stores, handle complex data, and manage states effectively, along with creating renderless components for specialized functionalities and learning animations with tweened and spring stores. The concluding chapters will help you focus on enhancing UI elements with transitions while covering accessibility considerations. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped to unlock Svelte's full potential, build exceptional web applications, and deliver performant, responsive, and inclusive user experiences.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: Writing Svelte Components
6
Part 2: Actions
10
Part 3: Context and Stores
16
Part 4: Transitions

Exercise – creating a drag-and-drop event

A drag-and-drop behavior means clicking on an element, moving the mouse while holding down the click to drag the element across the screen to the desired location, and then releasing the mouse click to drop the element in the new location.

A drag-and-drop behavior thus involves coordination between multiple events, namely, 'mousedown', 'mousemove', and 'mouseup'.

As we perform the drag-and-drop motion, what we are interested in knowing is when the dragging starts, how far the element is dragged, and when the dragging ends.

These three events can be translated into three custom events: 'dragStart', 'dragMove', and 'dragEnd'.

Let us try to implement the drag-and-drop behavior as an action that will create these three custom events:

<div
  use:dragAndDrop
  on:dragStart={...}
  on:dragMove={...}
  on:dragEnd={...}
/>
...