Changelog and Q&A with Rich Harris. The episode covers various updates and improvements in Svelte, including support for TypeScript type assertions, fixes for scoping classes, optimizations in the compiler, and enhancements in SSR (Server-Side Rendering) and CSS pruning.
Latest updates and features in the Svelte ecosystem, particularly around SvelteKit. The episode highlights the introduction of experimental async SSR (Server-Side Rendering), which allows for asynchronous operations directly within Svelte components, significantly improving developer experience.
SvelteKit gives developers the ability to do more with less. Less code, less energy, and consequently less time. More so, it gives you all the SEO benefits of single-page applications with client-side routing for almost instant navigation. Talk about the best of both worlds. With the techniques we'll discuss in this talk, you'll learn how to get the best of SvelteKit and unlock the superpowers you never knew you had
Routify 3 preview and walkthrough — app creation via CLI, plugin usage (Index By Name), Pico CSS integration, page ordering, and route metadata concepts.
Build-time metadata generation, API data fetching (e.g., GitHub), Markdown-to-HTML conversion, dynamic routes and imports for SSR, navigation and multi-router features, and router state persistence.
The front end development landscape has been transformed since we started building Svelte and Sapper. What would a reimagined, truly modern workflow look like?
If you are building a Single-Page App (SPA), you will likely need a router for your app. With the lack of an official router for Svelte 3, there's quite a few options, so which one should you pick?
In this talk, we'll look at the two different kinds of routers (based on the History API or based on the page's hash), how they differ, and when you should pick which. We'll also go through a demo of implementing routing for a Svelte 3 SPA using svelte-spa-router.
In this live coding experiment, Domenik talks about SvelteKit, the use of monorepos in combination with turborepo and how you can use SvelteKit to generate your packages that can be used inside your monorepo.
This little demo shows you how to create your own Svelte component library and release it to npm.
SvelteKit helps us to accomplish that task in an easy way.