Note: This project is in the very early stages of development and IS NOT yet intended for public consumption. If you submit an issue, I do not guarantee a response. Please do not submit pull requests without first consulting me on Twitter (@reinink).
Note: This repository is a fork with some fixes to make the adapter work with webpack, if you use rollup, you might want to check Pedro Borge's repo.
Install using NPM:
npm install jphms/inertia-svelte --save
The first step when using Inertia.js is to configure your server-side framework. This primarily includes setting up a root template and updating your endpoints to return a proper Inertia response. For an example of this, see our Laravel adapter.
You'll need to setup the svelte-loader for webpack. You can do it manually following these instructions, or just using laravel-mix-svelte.
Here is an example Webpack configuration that uses Laravel Mix. Note the @
alias to the /resources/js
directory.
const mix = require('laravel-mix')
const path = require('path')
mix.js('resources/js/app.js', 'public/js')
.sass('resources/sass/app.scss', 'public/css')
.webpackConfig({
output: {chunkFilename: 'js/[name].js?id=[chunkhash]'},
resolve: {
mainFields: ['svelte', 'browser', 'module', 'main'],
alias: {
'@': path.resolve('resources/js'),
},
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(html|svelte)$/,
use: {
loader: 'svelte-loader',
options: {
emitCss: true,
hotReload: true
}
}
}
]
}
})
We recommend using code splitting with Inertia.js. To do this we need to enable dynamic imports. We'll use a Babel plugin to make this work. First, install the plugin:
npm install @babel/plugin-syntax-dynamic-import --save
Next, create a .babelrc
file in your project with the following:
{
"plugins": ["@babel/plugin-syntax-dynamic-import"]
}
Alternatively, if you're using Laravel Mix, you can put this in your webpack.mix.js
file:
mix.babelConfig({
plugins: ['@babel/plugin-syntax-dynamic-import'],
})
Next, update your main JavaScript file to boot your Inertia app. All we're doing here is initializing Svelte with the base Inertia page component.
import Inertia from 'inertia-svelte'
const app = document.getElementById('app')
export default new Inertia({
target: app,
props: {
initialPage: JSON.parse(app.dataset.page),
resolveComponent: name => import(`@/Pages/${name}.svelte`).then(module => module.default),
},
})
The resolveComponent
is a callback that tells Inertia how to load a page component. It receives a page name (string), and must return a component instance.
It's possible to also use Inertia without code splitting. This will generate one larger JavaScript bundle, instead of many smaller ones. With this approach, the dynamic imports Babel plugin is not required.
One way to do this is manually loading all your page components:
import Inertia from 'inertia-svelte'
const app = document.getElementById('app')
const pages = {
'Dashboard/Index': require('./Pages/Dashboard/Index.svelte').default,
'Users/Index': require('./Pages/Users/Index.svelte').default,
'Users/Create': require('./Pages/Users/Create.svelte').default,
// etc...
}
export default new Inertia({
target: app,
props: {
initialPage: JSON.parse(app.dataset.page),
resolveComponent: name => pages[name],
},
})
Another option is to use required.context
to automatically register all your page components.
import Inertia from './Inertia/App.svelte'
const app = document.getElementById('app')
const files = require.context('./', true, /\.svelte$/i)
export default new Inertia({
target: app,
props: {
initialPage: JSON.parse(app.dataset.page),
resolveComponent: name => files(`./Pages/${name}.svelte`).default,
}
})
While not required, for most projects it makes sense to create a default site layout that your specific pages can extend. Save this to /Shared/Layout.svelte
.
<script>
import { InertiaLink } from 'inertia-svelte'
export let title
</script>
<svelte:head>
<title>{title}</title>
</svelte:head>
<main>
<header>
<InertiaLink href="/">Home</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/about">About</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/contact">Contact</InertiaLink>
</header>
<article>
<slot />
</article>
</main>
With Inertia.js, each page in your application is a JavaScript component. Here's an example of a page component. Save this to /Pages/Welcome.svelte
. Note how it extends the Layout.svelte
component we created above.
<script>
import Layout from '@/Shared/Layout.svelte';
</script>
<Layout title="Welcome">
<h1>Welcome</h1>
<p>Welcome to my first Inertia.js app!</p>
</Layout>
To create an Inertia link, use the <InertiaLink>
component.
<script>
import { InertiaLink } from 'inertia-svelte'
</script>
<InertiaLink href="/">Home</InertiaLink>
You can also specify the browser history and scroll behaviour. By default all link clicks "push" a new history state, and reset the scroll position back to the top of the page. However, you can override these defaults using the replace
and preserveScroll
attributes.
<InertiaLink replace preserveScroll href="/">Home</InertiaLink>
You can also specify the method for the request. The default is GET
, but you can also use POST
, PUT
, PATCH
, and DELETE
.
<InertiaLink href="/logout" method="post">Logout</InertiaLink>
You can add data using the data
attribute:
<InertiaLink href="/endpoint" method="post" data={{ foo: bar}}>Save</InertiaLink>
You can also preserve a page component's local state using the preserveState
attribute. This will prevent a page component from fully re-rendering. This is especially helpful with forms, since you can avoid manually repopulating input fields, and can also maintain a focused input.
<input on:change={handleChange} value={query} />
<InertiaLink href="/search" data={query} preserveState>Search</InertiaLink>
In addition to clicking links, it's also very common to manually make Inertia visits. The following methods are available. Take note of the defaults.
// Make a visit
Inertia.visit(url, { method: 'get', data: {}, replace: false, preserveState: false, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a "replace" visit
Inertia.replace(url, { method: 'get', data: {}, preserveState: true, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a "replace" visit to the current url
Inertia.reload({ method: 'get', data: {}, preserveState: false, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a POST visit
Inertia.post(url, data, { replace: false, preserveState: true, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a PUT visit
Inertia.put(url, data, { replace: false, preserveState: true, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a PATCH visit
Inertia.patch(url, data, { replace: false, preserveState: true, preserveScroll: false })
// Make a DELETE visit
Inertia.delete(url, { replace: false, preserveState: false, preserveScroll: false })
Just like with an <InertiaLink>
, you can control the history control behaviour using replace
, scroll behaviour using preserveScroll
, and local component state behaviour using preserveState
.
Sometimes it's necessary to access the page data (props) from a non-page component. One really common use-case for this is the site layout. For example, maybe you want to show the currently authenticated user in your site header. This is possible using React's context feature. The base Inertia component automatically provides the current page via context, which can then be accessed by a consumer later on.
The easiest way to access page props is with our pageProps
store.
<script>
import { InertiaLink, pageProps } from 'inertia-svelte'
$: ({ auth } = $pageProps)
</script>
<main>
<header>
You are logged in as: {auth.user.name}
<nav>
<InertiaLink href="/">Home</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/about">About</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/contact">Contact</InertiaLink>
</nav>
</header>
<article>
<slot />
</article>
</main>
If you need to access the entire Inertia page
object, you can directly access it via the page
store. Note that pageProps
should suffice for most use cases, so we don't recommend doing this unless you have a good reason!
<script>
import { InertiaLink, page } from 'inertia-svelte'
$: props = $page.props
</script>
<main>
<header>
You are logged in as: {props.auth.user.name}
<nav>
<InertiaLink href="/">Home</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/about">About</InertiaLink>
<InertiaLink href="/contact">Contact</InertiaLink>
</nav>
</header>
<article>
<slot />
</article>
</main>
When navigating browser history, Inertia reloads pages using prop data cached in history state. Inertia does not, however, cache local component state, since this is beyond its reach. This can lead to outdated pages in your browser history. For example, if a user partially completes a form, then navigates away, and then returns back, the form will be reset and their work will have been lost.
To mitigate this issue, you can use the rememberedState
store to tell Inertia.js which local component state to cache.
<script>
import { Inertia, rememberedState } from 'inertia-svelte'
let form = useRememberedState({
first_name: null,
last_name: null,
})
</script>
<form on:submit|preventDefault={() => Inertia.post('/contact', $form)}>
<label for="first_name">First Name:</label>
<input id="first_name" bind:value={$form.first_name}></div>
<label for="last_name">Last name:</label>
<input id="last_name" bind:value={$form.last_name}></div>
<button type="submit">Save</button>
</form>
If your page contains multiple components using the remember functionality, you'll need to provide a unique key for each component. For example, Users/Create
. If you have multiple instances of the same component on the page, be sure to include a unique identifier for each of those instances. For example, Users/Edit:{id}
.
<script>
import { Inertia, pageProps, rememberedState } from 'inertia-svelte'
$: ({ user } = $pageProps)
let form = useRememberedState({
first_name: null,
last_name: null,
}, `Users/Edit:${user.id}`)
</script>
<form on:submit|preventDefault={() => Inertia.post('/contact', $form)}>
<label for="first_name">First Name:</label>
<input id="first_name" bind:value={$form.first_name}></div>
<label for="last_name">Last name:</label>
<input id="last_name" bind:value={$form.last_name}></div>
<button type="submit">Save</button>
</form>