| name | svelte-core-bestpractices |
| description | Guidance on writing fast, robust, modern Svelte code. Load this skill whenever in a Svelte project and asked to write/edit or analyze a Svelte component or module. Covers reactivity, event handling, styling, integration with libraries and more. |
$state
Only use the $state rune for variables that should be reactive — in other words, variables that cause an $effect, $derived or template expression to update. Everything else can be a normal variable.
Objects and arrays ($state({...}) or $state([...])) are made deeply reactive, meaning mutation will trigger updates. This has a trade-off: in exchange for fine-grained reactivity, the objects must be proxied, which has performance overhead. In cases where you're dealing with large objects that are only ever reassigned (rather than mutated), use $state.raw instead. This is often the case with API responses, for example.
$derived
To compute something from state, use $derived rather than $effect:
let square = $derived(num * num);
let square;
$effect(() => {
square = num * num;
});
[!NOTE] $derived is given an expression, not a function. If you need to use a function (because the expression is complex, for example) use $derived.by.
Deriveds are writable — you can assign to them, just like $state, except that they will re-evaluate when their expression changes.
If the derived expression is an object or array, it will be returned as-is — it is not made deeply reactive. You can, however, use $state inside $derived.by in the rare cases that you need this.
$effect
Effects are an escape hatch and should mostly be avoided. In particular, avoid updating state inside effects.
- If you need to sync state to an external library such as D3, it is often neater to use
{@attach ...}
- If you need to run some code in response to user interaction, put the code directly in an event handler or use a function binding as appropriate
- If you need to log values for debugging purposes, use
$inspect
- If you need to observe something external to Svelte, use
createSubscriber
Never wrap the contents of an effect in if (browser) {...} or similar — effects do not run on the server.
$props
Treat props as though they will change. For example, values that depend on props should usually use $derived:
let { type } = $props();
let color = $derived(type === 'danger' ? 'red' : 'green');
let color = type === 'danger' ? 'red' : 'green';
$inspect.trace
$inspect.trace is a debugging tool for reactivity. If something is not updating properly or running more than it should you can add $inspect.trace(label) as the first line of an $effect or $derived.by (or any function they call) to trace their dependencies and discover which one triggered an update.
SvelteKit route UX
When adding bookmarkable SvelteKit routes to an app-like surface, preserve the distinction between landing/marketing pages and workspace/application routes. A hero that is appropriate on / can become a usability bug on /app/[item] if every in-app navigation scrolls the user back through the marketing header.
Before browser QA in an existing local project, use the already-running dev server when the project convention or prior context says one exists. Do not reflexively start a second npm run dev; first navigate/curl the known local URL. If it is stale or down, restart through the project’s managed dev command/service rather than raw Vite unless the repo has no manager. This avoids noisy port-in-use failures and respects Scott’s live dev setup.
For workspace-style route links:
- Use real
<a href="..."> links for bookmarkability and accessibility, not button-only local state.
- Add
data-sveltekit-noscroll when route changes should preserve the user's working position instead of jumping to the top.
- Let explicit route params own selected entity state. Local persistence can restore sub-state (for example selected move/step), but the route slug should own the selected mission/item when present.
- Verify in a real browser by setting
document.documentElement.scrollTop/window.scrollTo, clicking the route link, waiting for navigation, and comparing scrollY before/after. Also verify the route does not re-render landing-only content on workspace pages.
Events
Any element attribute starting with on is treated as an event listener:
<button onclick={() => {...}}>click me</button>
<!-- attribute shorthand also works -->
<button {onclick}>...</button>
<!-- so do spread attributes -->
<button {...props}>...</button>
Prefer plain bubble-phase handlers like onclick for ordinary UI interactions. Do not reach for capture-phase names such as onclickcapture unless the component specifically needs capture semantics; they are easy to miss in review because svelte-check can pass while the app behavior is wrong or stale in the browser. After changing event handlers, verify the actual interaction in a browser and, when reading DOM state immediately after a click, allow a short tick/delay before asserting derived UI changed. See references/event-handler-browser-verification.md for a concrete verification probe pattern.
For SvelteKit app-workspace navigation, do not let route links destroy the user's working position unless the route is genuinely a new document/landing context. Use real anchors for bookmarkability, and add data-sveltekit-noscroll on in-app navigation where preserving scroll matters. Verify with a browser probe that sets document.documentElement.style.scrollBehavior = 'auto', forces scrollTop/scrollY to a meaningful value, clicks the link, waits for navigation, and asserts the scroll position remained stable.
If you need to attach listeners to window or document you can use <svelte:window> and <svelte:document>:
<svelte:window onkeydown={...} />
<svelte:document onvisibilitychange={...} />
Avoid using onMount or $effect for this.
SvelteKit route UX
When converting local-state navigation to real SvelteKit routes, verify scroll behavior in the browser. App/workspace routes often should not jump back to the top when switching adjacent items. Use data-sveltekit-noscroll on route links when preserving the current workspace position is the intended interaction. See references/sveltekit-workspace-route-ux.md for the full pattern and verification probe.
Keep route-owned state explicit: if a route parameter selects an item, derive selected state from the param instead of capturing it once into $state. Let local persistence restore secondary state like the selected step/move, but let the route own the primary item.
Snippets
Snippets are a way to define reusable chunks of markup that can be instantiated with the {@render ...} tag, or passed to components as props. They must be declared within the template.
{#snippet greeting(name)}
<p>hello {name}!</p>
{/snippet}
{@render greeting('world')}
[!NOTE] Snippets declared at the top level of a component (i.e. not inside elements or blocks) can be referenced inside <script>. A snippet that doesn't reference component state is also available in a <script module>, in which case it can be exported for use by other components.
Each blocks
Prefer to use keyed each blocks — this improves performance by allowing Svelte to surgically insert or remove items rather than updating the DOM belonging to existing items.
[!NOTE] The key must uniquely identify the object. Do not use the index as a key.
Avoid destructuring if you need to mutate the item (with something like bind:value={item.count}, for example).
Using JavaScript variables in CSS
If you have a JS variable that you want to use inside CSS you can set a CSS custom property with the style: directive.
<div style:--columns={columns}>...</div>
You can then reference var(--columns) inside the component's <style>.
Styling child components
The CSS in a component's <style> is scoped to that component. If a parent component needs to control the child's styles, the preferred way is to use CSS custom properties:
<!-- Parent.svelte -->
<Child --color="red" />
<!-- Child.svelte -->
<h1>Hello</h1>
<style>
h1 {
color: var(--color);
}
</style>
If this is impossible (for example, the child component comes from a library) you can use :global to override styles:
<div>
<Child />
</div>
<style>
div :global {
h1 {
color: red;
}
}
</style>
Context
Consider using context instead of declaring state in a shared module. This will scope the state to the part of the app that needs it, and eliminate the possibility of it leaking between users when server-side rendering.
Use createContext rather than setContext and getContext, as it provides type safety.
Async Svelte
If using version 5.36 or higher, you can use await expressions and hydratable to use promises directly inside components. Note that these require the experimental.async option to be enabled in svelte.config.js as they are not yet considered fully stable.
Avoid legacy features
Always use runes mode for new code, and avoid features that have more modern replacements:
- use
$state instead of implicit reactivity (e.g. let count = 0; count += 1)
- use
$derived and $effect instead of $: assignments and statements (but only use effects when there is no better solution)
- use
$props instead of export let, $$props and $$restProps
- use
onclick={...} instead of on:click={...}
- use
{#snippet ...} and {@render ...} instead of <slot> and $$slots and <svelte:fragment>
- use
<DynamicComponent> instead of <svelte:component this={DynamicComponent}>
- use
import Self from './ThisComponent.svelte' and <Self> instead of <svelte:self>
- use classes with
$state fields to share reactivity between components, instead of using stores
- use
{@attach ...} instead of use:action
- use clsx-style arrays and objects in
class attributes, instead of the class: directive