Use Svelte with abstract-state-router!
svelte-state-renderer>=2 is compatible withsvelte>=1.8.1svelte-state-renderer<2 is compatible withsvelte<2
npm + your favorite CommonJS bundler is easiest.
npm install svelte-state-rendererYou can also download the stand-alone build from wzrd.in. If you include it in a <script> tag, a svelteStateRenderer function will be available on the global scope.
const StateRouter = require('abstract-state-router')
const makeSvelteStateRenderer = require('svelte-state-renderer')
const defaultParameters = {
methods: {
annoy() {
alert('Modal dialogs are annoying')
}
}
}
const renderer = makeSvelteStateRenderer(defaultParameters)
const stateRouter = StateRouter(renderer, document.querySelector('body'))
// add whatever states to the state router
stateRouter.evaluateCurrentRoute('login')Any parameters you pass in the defaultParameters object will be passed to all Svelte components when they are constructed. In addition, any members of the methods object will be added to the object itself.
Svelte components don't give you an easy way to corrupt them with stateful functions at the moment, but it is possible. You can access the state router's makePath and stateIsActive functions on the asr object for now:
<a
href="{{ asr.makePath('app.topics.tasks', { topicId: topic.id }) }}"
class="{{ asr.stateIsActive('app.topics.tasks', { topicId: topic.id }) ? 'active' : '' }}"
>
{{topic.name}}
</a>To embed child states, add a <uiView></uiView> element to the parent template.
When calling the abstract-state-router's addState function, you may provide any of these values as the template:
- a Svelte component constructor function
- an object with two properties:
component, a Svelte component constructor functionoptions, an object whose properties will be merged into the other default options and used to instantiate the Svelte components