diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'web/pw-frontend/README.md')
-rw-r--r-- | web/pw-frontend/README.md | 48 |
1 files changed, 48 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/web/pw-frontend/README.md b/web/pw-frontend/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a9d516a --- /dev/null +++ b/web/pw-frontend/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +# Svelte + TS + Vite + +This template should help get you started developing with Svelte and TypeScript in Vite. + +## Recommended IDE Setup + +[VSCode](https://code.visualstudio.com/) + [Svelte](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=svelte.svelte-vscode). + +## Need an official Svelte framework? + +Check out [SvelteKit](https://github.com/sveltejs/kit#readme), which is also powered by Vite. Deploy anywhere with its serverless-first approach and adapt to various platforms, with out of the box support for TypeScript, SCSS, and Less, and easily-added support for mdsvex, GraphQL, PostCSS, Tailwind CSS, and more. + +## Technical considerations + +**Why use this over SvelteKit?** + +- It brings its own routing solution which might not be preferable for some users. +- It is first and foremost a framework that just happens to use Vite under the hood, not a Vite app. + `vite dev` and `vite build` wouldn't work in a SvelteKit environment, for example. + +This template contains as little as possible to get started with Vite + TypeScript + Svelte, while taking into account the developer experience with regards to HMR and intellisense. It demonstrates capabilities on par with the other `create-vite` templates and is a good starting point for beginners dipping their toes into a Vite + Svelte project. + +Should you later need the extended capabilities and extensibility provided by SvelteKit, the template has been structured similarly to SvelteKit so that it is easy to migrate. + +**Why `global.d.ts` instead of `compilerOptions.types` inside `jsconfig.json` or `tsconfig.json`?** + +Setting `compilerOptions.types` shuts out all other types not explicitly listed in the configuration. Using triple-slash references keeps the default TypeScript setting of accepting type information from the entire workspace, while also adding `svelte` and `vite/client` type information. + +**Why include `.vscode/extensions.json`?** + +Other templates indirectly recommend extensions via the README, but this file allows VS Code to prompt the user to install the recommended extension upon opening the project. + +**Why enable `allowJs` in the TS template?** + +While `allowJs: false` would indeed prevent the use of `.js` files in the project, it does not prevent the use of JavaScript syntax in `.svelte` files. In addition, it would force `checkJs: false`, bringing the worst of both worlds: not being able to guarantee the entire codebase is TypeScript, and also having worse typechecking for the existing JavaScript. In addition, there are valid use cases in which a mixed codebase may be relevant. + +**Why is HMR not preserving my local component state?** + +HMR state preservation comes with a number of gotchas! It has been disabled by default in both `svelte-hmr` and `@sveltejs/vite-plugin-svelte` due to its often surprising behavior. You can read the details [here](https://github.com/rixo/svelte-hmr#svelte-hmr). + +If you have state that's important to retain within a component, consider creating an external store which would not be replaced by HMR. + +```ts +// store.ts +// An extremely simple external store +import { writable } from 'svelte/store' +export default writable(0) +``` |