Core concepts
Routing
Edit this page on GitHubAt the heart of SvelteKit is a filesystem-based router. The routes of your app — i.e. the URL paths that users can access — are defined by the directories in your codebase:
src/routesis the root routesrc/routes/aboutcreates an/aboutroutesrc/routes/blog/[slug]creates a route with a parameter,slug, that can be used to load data dynamically when a user requests a page like/blog/hello-world
You can change
src/routesto a different directory by editing the project config.
Each route directory contains one or more route files, which can be identified by their + prefix.
+pagepermalink
+page.sveltepermalink
A +page.svelte component defines a page of your app. By default, pages are rendered both on the server (SSR) for the initial request and in the browser (CSR) for subsequent navigation.
<h1>Hello and welcome to my site!</h1>
<a href="/about">About my site</a><h1>About this site</h1>
<p>TODO...</p>
<a href="/">Home</a><script>
/** @type {import('./$types').PageData} */
export let data;
</script>
<h1>{data.title}</h1>
<div>{@html data.content}</div><script lang="ts">
import type { PageData } from './$types';
export let data: PageData;
</script>
<h1>{data.title}</h1>
<div>{@html data.content}</div>Note that SvelteKit uses
<a>elements to navigate between routes, rather than a framework-specific<Link>component.
+page.jspermalink
Often, a page will need to load some data before it can be rendered. For this, we add a +page.js module that exports a load function:
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';/** @type {import('./$types').PageLoad} */export functionload ({params }) {if (params .slug === 'hello-world') {return {title : 'Hello world!',content : 'Welcome to our blog. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...'};}throwerror (404, 'Not found');}
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';import type {PageLoad } from './$types';export constload :PageLoad = ({params }) => {if (params .slug === 'hello-world') {return {title : 'Hello world!',content : 'Welcome to our blog. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...',};}throwerror (404, 'Not found');};
This function runs alongside +page.svelte, which means it runs on the server during server-side rendering and in the browser during client-side navigation. See load for full details of the API.
As well as load, +page.js can export values that configure the page's behaviour:
export const prerender = trueorfalseor'auto'export const ssr = trueorfalseexport const csr = trueorfalse
You can find more information about these in page options.
+page.server.jspermalink
If your load function can only run on the server — for example, if it needs to fetch data from a database or you need to access private environment variables like API keys — then you can rename +page.js to +page.server.js and change the PageLoad type to PageServerLoad.
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';/** @type {import('./$types').PageServerLoad} */export async functionload ({params }) {constpost = awaitgetPostFromDatabase (params .slug );if (post ) {returnpost ;}throwerror (404, 'Not found');}
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';import type {PageServerLoad } from './$types';export constload :PageServerLoad = async ({params }) => {constpost = awaitgetPostFromDatabase (params .slug );if (post ) {returnpost ;}throwerror (404, 'Not found');};
During client-side navigation, SvelteKit will load this data from the server, which means that the returned value must be serializable using devalue. See load for full details of the API.
Like +page.js, +page.server.js can export page options — prerender, ssr and csr.
A +page.server.js file can also export actions. If load lets you read data from the server, actions let you write data to the server using the <form> element. To learn how to use them, see the form actions section.
+errorpermalink
If an error occurs during load, SvelteKit will render a default error page. You can customise this error page on a per-route basis by adding an +error.svelte file:
<script>
import { page } from '$app/stores';
</script>
<h1>{$page.status}: {$page.error.message}</h1><script lang="ts">
import { page } from '$app/stores';
</script>
<h1>{$page.status}: {$page.error.message}</h1>SvelteKit will 'walk up the tree' looking for the closest error boundary — if the file above didn't exist it would try src/routes/blog/+error.svelte and then src/routes/+error.svelte before rendering the default error page. If that fails (or if the error was thrown from the load function of the root +layout, which sits 'above' the root +error), SvelteKit will bail out and render a static fallback error page, which you can customise by creating a src/error.html file.
If the error occurs inside a load function in +layout(.server).js, the closest error boundary in the tree is an +error.svelte file above that layout (not next to it).
If no route can be found (404), src/routes/+error.svelte (or the default error page, if that file does not exist) will be used.
+error.svelteis not used when an error occurs insidehandleor a +server.js request handler.
You can read more about error handling here.
+layoutpermalink
So far, we've treated pages as entirely standalone components — upon navigation, the existing +page.svelte component will be destroyed, and a new one will take its place.
But in many apps, there are elements that should be visible on every page, such as top-level navigation or a footer. Instead of repeating them in every +page.svelte, we can put them in layouts.
+layout.sveltepermalink
To create a layout that applies to every page, make a file called src/routes/+layout.svelte. The default layout (the one that SvelteKit uses if you don't bring your own) looks like this...
<slot></slot>...but we can add whatever markup, styles and behaviour we want. The only requirement is that the component includes a <slot> for the page content. For example, let's add a nav bar:
<nav>
<a href="/">Home</a>
<a href="/about">About</a>
<a href="/settings">Settings</a>
</nav>
<slot></slot>If we create pages for /, /about and /settings...
<h1>Home</h1><h1>About</h1><h1>Settings</h1>...the nav will always be visible, and clicking between the three pages will only result in the <h1> being replaced.
Layouts can be nested. Suppose we don't just have a single /settings page, but instead have nested pages like /settings/profile and /settings/notifications with a shared submenu (for a real-life example, see github.com/settings).
We can create a layout that only applies to pages below /settings (while inheriting the root layout with the top-level nav):
<script>
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutData} */
export let data;
</script>
<h1>Settings</h1>
<div class="submenu">
{#each data.sections as section}
<a href="/settings/{section.slug}">{section.title}</a>
{/each}
</div>
<slot></slot><script lang="ts">
import type { LayoutData } from './$types';
export let data: LayoutData;
</script>
<h1>Settings</h1>
<div class="submenu">
{#each data.sections as section}
<a href="/settings/{section.slug}">{section.title}</a>
{/each}
</div>
<slot></slot>By default, each layout inherits the layout above it. Sometimes that isn't what you want - in this case, advanced layouts can help you.
+layout.jspermalink
Just like +page.svelte loading data from +page.js, your +layout.svelte component can get data from a load function in +layout.js.
ts/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutLoad} */export functionload () {return {sections : [{slug : 'profile',title : 'Profile' },{slug : 'notifications',title : 'Notifications' }]};}
tsimport type {LayoutLoad } from './$types';export constload :LayoutLoad = () => {return {sections : [{slug : 'profile',title : 'Profile' },{slug : 'notifications',title : 'Notifications' },],};};
If a +layout.js exports page options — prerender, ssr and csr — they will be used as defaults for child pages.
Data returned from a layout's load function is also available to all its child pages:
<script>
/** @type {import('./$types').PageData} */
export let data;
console.log(data.sections); // [{ slug: 'profile', title: 'Profile' }, ...]
</script><script lang="ts">
import type { PageData } from './$types';
export let data: PageData;
console.log(data.sections); // [{ slug: 'profile', title: 'Profile' }, ...]
</script>Often, layout data is unchanged when navigating between pages. SvelteKit will intelligently rerun
loadfunctions when necessary.
+layout.server.jspermalink
To run your layout's load function on the server, move it to +layout.server.js, and change the LayoutLoad type to LayoutServerLoad.
Like +layout.js, +layout.server.js can export page options — prerender, ssr and csr.
+serverpermalink
As well as pages, you can define routes with a +server.js file (sometimes referred to as an 'API route' or an 'endpoint'), which gives you full control over the response. Your +server.js file exports functions corresponding to HTTP verbs like GET, POST, PATCH, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS, and HEAD that take a RequestEvent argument and return a Response object.
For example we could create an /api/random-number route with a GET handler:
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';/** @type {import('./$types').RequestHandler} */export functionGET ({url }) {constmin =Number (url .searchParams .get ('min') ?? '0');constmax =Number (url .searchParams .get ('max') ?? '1');constd =max -min ;if (isNaN (d ) ||d < 0) {throwerror (400, 'min and max must be numbers, and min must be less than max');}constrandom =min +Math .random () *d ;return newResponse (String (random ));}
tsimport {error } from '@sveltejs/kit';import type {RequestHandler } from './$types';export constGET :RequestHandler = ({url }) => {constmin =Number (url .searchParams .get ('min') ?? '0');constmax =Number (url .searchParams .get ('max') ?? '1');constd =max -min ;if (isNaN (d ) ||d < 0) {throwerror (400, 'min and max must be numbers, and min must be less than max');}constrandom =min +Math .random () *d ;return newResponse (String (random ));};
The first argument to Response can be a ReadableStream, making it possible to stream large amounts of data or create server-sent events (unless deploying to platforms that buffer responses, like AWS Lambda).
You can use the error, redirect and json methods from @sveltejs/kit for convenience (but you don't have to).
If an error is thrown (either throw error(...) or an unexpected error), the response will be a JSON representation of the error or a fallback error page — which can be customised via src/error.html — depending on the Accept header. The +error.svelte component will not be rendered in this case. You can read more about error handling here.
When creating an
OPTIONShandler, note that Vite will injectAccess-Control-Allow-OriginandAccess-Control-Allow-Methodsheaders — these will not be present in production unless you add them.
Receiving datapermalink
By exporting POST/PUT/PATCH/DELETE/OPTIONS/HEAD handlers, +server.js files can be used to create a complete API:
<script>
let a = 0;
let b = 0;
let total = 0;
async function add() {
const response = await fetch('/api/add', {
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({ a, b }),
headers: {
'content-type': 'application/json'
}
});
total = await response.json();
}
</script>
<input type="number" bind:value={a}> +
<input type="number" bind:value={b}> =
{total}
<button on:click={add}>Calculate</button><script lang="ts">
let a = 0;
let b = 0;
let total = 0;
async function add() {
const response = await fetch('/api/add', {
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({ a, b }),
headers: {
'content-type': 'application/json',
},
});
total = await response.json();
}
</script>
<input type="number" bind:value={a}> +
<input type="number" bind:value={b}> =
{total}
<button on:click={add}>Calculate</button>tsimport {json } from '@sveltejs/kit';/** @type {import('./$types').RequestHandler} */export async functionPOST ({request }) {const {a ,b } = awaitrequest .json ();returnjson (a +b );}
tsimport {json } from '@sveltejs/kit';import type {RequestHandler } from './$types';export constPOST :RequestHandler = async ({request }) => {const {a ,b } = awaitrequest .json ();returnjson (a +b );};
In general, form actions are a better way to submit data from the browser to the server.
If a
GEThandler is exported, aHEADrequest will return thecontent-lengthof theGEThandler's response body.
Fallback method handlerpermalink
Exporting the fallback handler will match any unhandled request methods, including methods like MOVE which have no dedicated export from +server.js.
tsimport {json ,text } from '@sveltejs/kit';export async functionPOST ({request }) {const {a ,b } = awaitrequest .json ();returnjson (a +b );}// This handler will respond to PUT, PATCH, DELETE, etc./** @type {import('./$types').RequestHandler} */export async functionfallback ({request }) {returntext (`I caught your ${request .method } request!`);}
tsimport {json ,text } from '@sveltejs/kit';import type {RequestHandler } from './$types';export async functionPOST ({request }) {const {a ,b } = awaitrequest .json ();returnjson (a +b );}// This handler will respond to PUT, PATCH, DELETE, etc.export constfallback :RequestHandler = async ({request }) => {returntext (`I caught your ${request .method } request!`);};
For
HEADrequests, theGEThandler takes precedence over thefallbackhandler.
Content negotiationpermalink
+server.js files can be placed in the same directory as +page files, allowing the same route to be either a page or an API endpoint. To determine which, SvelteKit applies the following rules:
PUT/PATCH/DELETE/OPTIONSrequests are always handled by+server.jssince they do not apply to pagesGET/POST/HEADrequests are treated as page requests if theacceptheader prioritisestext/html(in other words, it's a browser page request), else they are handled by+server.js.- Responses to
GETrequests will include aVary: Acceptheader, so that proxies and browsers cache HTML and JSON responses separately.
$typespermalink
Throughout the examples above, we've been importing types from a $types.d.ts file. This is a file SvelteKit creates for you in a hidden directory if you're using TypeScript (or JavaScript with JSDoc type annotations) to give you type safety when working with your root files.
For example, annotating export let data with PageData (or LayoutData, for a +layout.svelte file) tells TypeScript that the type of data is whatever was returned from load:
<script>
/** @type {import('./$types').PageData} */
export let data;
</script><script lang="ts">
import type { PageData } from './$types';
export let data: PageData;
</script>In turn, annotating the load function with PageLoad, PageServerLoad, LayoutLoad or LayoutServerLoad (for +page.js, +page.server.js, +layout.js and +layout.server.js respectively) ensures that params and the return value are correctly typed.
If you're using VS Code or any IDE that supports the language server protocol and TypeScript plugins then you can omit these types entirely! Svelte's IDE tooling will insert the correct types for you, so you'll get type checking without writing them yourself. It also works with our command line tool svelte-check.
You can read more about omitting $types in our blog post about it.
Other filespermalink
Any other files inside a route directory are ignored by SvelteKit. This means you can colocate components and utility modules with the routes that need them.
If components and modules are needed by multiple routes, it's a good idea to put them in $lib.