svelte | Skill Performance & Reviews | TopRankSkills

TopRank Skills

Home / Skills / tools / svelte

svelte

maintained by EpicenterHQ

star 4k account_tree 268 verified_user MIT License
bolt View GitHub

name: svelte description: Svelte 5 patterns including TanStack Query mutations, shadcn-svelte components, and component composition. Use when writing Svelte components, using TanStack Query, or working with shadcn-svelte UI.

Svelte Guidelines

Mutation Pattern Preference

In Svelte Files (.svelte)

Always prefer createMutation from TanStack Query for mutations. This provides:

  • Loading states (isPending)
  • Error states (isError)
  • Success states (isSuccess)
  • Better UX with automatic state management

The Preferred Pattern

Pass onSuccess and onError as the second argument to .mutate() to get maximum context:

<script lang="ts">
	import { createMutation } from '@tanstack/svelte-query';
	import * as rpc from '$lib/query';

	// Create mutation with just .options (no parentheses!)
	const deleteSessionMutation = createMutation(
		rpc.sessions.deleteSession.options,
	);

	// Local state that we can access in callbacks
	let isDialogOpen = $state(false);
</script>

<Button
	onclick={() => {
		// Pass callbacks as second argument to .mutate()
		deleteSessionMutation.mutate(
			{ sessionId },
			{
				onSuccess: () => {
					// Access local state and context
					isDialogOpen = false;
					toast.success('Session deleted');
					goto('/sessions');
				},
				onError: (error) => {
					toast.error(error.title, { description: error.description });
				},
			},
		);
	}}
	disabled={deleteSessionMutation.isPending}
>
	{#if deleteSessionMutation.isPending}
		Deleting...
	{:else}
		Delete
	{/if}
</Button>

Why This Pattern?

  • More context: Access to local variables and state at the call site
  • Better organization: Success/error handling is co-located with the action
  • Flexibility: Different calls can have different success/error behaviors

In TypeScript Files (.ts)

Always use .execute() since createMutation requires component context:

// In a .ts file (e.g., load function, utility)
const result = await rpc.sessions.createSession.execute({
	body: { title: 'New Session' },
});

const { data, error } = result;
if (error) {
	// Handle error
} else if (data) {
	// Handle success
}

Exception: When to Use .execute() in Svelte Files

Only use .execute() in Svelte files when:

  1. You don't need loading states
  2. You're performing a one-off operation
  3. You need fine-grained control over async flow

Inline Simple Handler Functions

When a handler function only calls .mutate(), inline it directly:

<!-- Avoid: Unnecessary wrapper function -->
<script>
	function handleShare() {
		shareMutation.mutate({ id });
	}
</script>

<!-- Good: Inline simple handlers -->
<Button onclick={() => shareMutation.mutate({ id })}>Share</Button>
<Button onclick={handleShare}>Share</Button>

Styling

For general CSS and Tailwind guidelines, see the styling skill.

shadcn-svelte Best Practices

Component Organization

  • Use the CLI: bunx shadcn-svelte@latest add [component]
  • Each component in its own folder under $lib/components/ui/ with an index.ts export
  • Follow kebab-case for folder names (e.g., dialog/, toggle-group/)
  • Group related sub-components in the same folder
  • When using $state, $derived, or functions only referenced once in markup, inline them directly

Import Patterns

Namespace imports (preferred for multi-part components):

import * as Dialog from '$lib/components/ui/dialog';
import * as ToggleGroup from '$lib/components/ui/toggle-group';

Named imports (for single components):

import { Button } from '$lib/components/ui/button';
import { Input } from '$lib/components/ui/input';

Lucide icons (always use individual imports from @lucide/svelte):

// Good: Individual icon imports
import Database from '@lucide/svelte/icons/database';
import MinusIcon from '@lucide/svelte/icons/minus';
import MoreVerticalIcon from '@lucide/svelte/icons/more-vertical';

// Bad: Don't import multiple icons from lucide-svelte
import { Database, MinusIcon, MoreVerticalIcon } from 'lucide-svelte';

The path uses kebab-case (e.g., more-vertical, minimize-2), and you can name the import whatever you want (typically PascalCase with optional Icon suffix).

Styling and Customization

  • Always use the cn() utility from $lib/utils for combining Tailwind classes
  • Modify component code directly rather than overriding styles with complex CSS
  • Use tailwind-variants for component variant systems
  • Follow the background/foreground convention for colors
  • Leverage CSS variables for theme consistency

Component Usage Patterns

Use proper component composition following shadcn-svelte patterns:

<Dialog.Root bind:open={isOpen}>
	<Dialog.Trigger>
		<Button>Open</Button>
	</Dialog.Trigger>
	<Dialog.Content>
		<Dialog.Header>
			<Dialog.Title>Title</Dialog.Title>
		</Dialog.Header>
	</Dialog.Content>
</Dialog.Root>

Custom Components

  • When extending shadcn components, create wrapper components that maintain the design system
  • Add JSDoc comments for complex component props
  • Ensure custom components follow the same organizational patterns
  • Consider semantic appropriateness (e.g., use section headers instead of cards for page sections)

Self-Contained Component Pattern

Prefer Component Composition Over Parent State Management

When building interactive components (especially with dialogs/modals), create self-contained components rather than managing state at the parent level.

The Anti-Pattern (Parent State Management)

<!-- Parent component -->
<script>
	let deletingItem = $state(null);

	function handleDelete(item) {
		// delete logic
		deletingItem = null;
	}
</script>

{#each items as item}
	<Button onclick={() => (deletingItem = item)}>Delete</Button>
{/each}

<AlertDialog open={!!deletingItem}>
	<!-- Single dialog for all items -->
</AlertDialog>

The Pattern (Self-Contained Components)

<!-- DeleteItemButton.svelte -->
<script>
	let { item } = $props();
	let open = $state(false);

	function handleDelete() {
		// delete logic directly in component
	}
</script>

<AlertDialog.Root bind:open>
	<AlertDialog.Trigger>
		<Button>Delete</Button>
	</AlertDialog.Trigger>
	<AlertDialog.Content>
		<!-- Dialog content -->
	</AlertDialog.Content>
</AlertDialog.Root>

<!-- Parent component -->
{#each items as item}
	<DeleteItemButton {item} />
{/each}

Why This Pattern Works

  • No parent state pollution: Parent doesn't need to track which item is being deleted
  • Better encapsulation: All delete logic lives in one place
  • Simpler mental model: Each row has its own delete button with its own dialog
  • No callbacks needed: Component handles everything internally
  • Scales better: Adding new actions doesn't complicate the parent

When to Apply This Pattern

  • Action buttons in table rows (delete, edit, etc.)
  • Confirmation dialogs for list items
  • Any repeating UI element that needs modal interactions
  • When you find yourself passing callbacks just to update parent state

The key insight: It's perfectly fine to instantiate multiple dialogs (one per row) rather than managing a single shared dialog with complex state. Modern frameworks handle this efficiently, and the code clarity is worth it.

chat Comments (0)

chat_bubble_outline

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Skill Details

GitHub Stars 4k
GitHub Forks 268
Created Jan 2026
Last Updated 4个月前
tools tools full stack

Related Skills

ui-ux-pro-max
chevron_right
ui-ux-pro-max
chevron_right
nestjs-expert
chevron_right
performance-optimization
chevron_right
deployment
chevron_right

Build your own?

Join 12,000+ developers contributing to the Claude ecosystem.