Svelte Language Tools contains a library implementing the Language Server Protocol (LSP). LSP powers the VSCode extension, which is also hosted in this repository. Additionally, LSP is capable of powering plugins for numerous other IDEs.
A .svelte
file would look something like this:
<script>
let count = 1;
// the `$:` means 're-run whenever these values change'
$: doubled = count * 2;
$: quadrupled = doubled * 2;
function handleClick() {
count += 1;
}
</script>
<button on:click="{handleClick}">
Count: {count}
</button>
<p>{count} * 2 = {doubled}</p>
<p>{doubled} * 2 = {quadrupled}</p>
Which is a mix of HTMLx and vanilla JavaScript (but with additional runtime behavior coming from the svelte compiler).
This repo contains the tools which provide editor integrations for Svelte files like this.
This repo uses yarn workspaces
, which TLDR means if you want to run a commands in each project then you can either cd
to that directory and run the command, or use yarn workspace [package_name] [command]
.
For example yarn workspace svelte-language-server test
.
The language server for Svelte. Built from UnwrittenFun/svelte-language-server and heavily inspired by Vetur to become the official language server for the language.
A command line tool to check your svelte files for type errors, unused css, and more. Built from Vetur's VTI.
The official vscode extension for Svelte. Built from UnwrittenFun/svelte-vscode to become the official vscode extension for the language.
Converts a .svelte file into a legal TypeScript file. Built from halfnelson/svelte2tsx to provide the auto-complete and import mapping inside the language server.
Pull requests are encouraged and always welcome. Pick an issue and help us out!
To install and work on these tools locally:
Make sure to uninstall the extension from the marketplace to not have it clash with the local one.
git clone https://github.com/sveltejs/language-tools.git svelte-language-tools
cd svelte-language-tools
yarn install
yarn bootstrap
Do not use npm to install the dependencies, as the specific package versions in
yarn.lock
are used to build and test Svelte.
To build all of the tools, run:
yarn build
The tools are written in TypeScript, but don't let that put you off — it's basically just JavaScript with type annotations. You'll pick it up in no time. If you're using an editor other than Visual Studio Code you may need to install a plugin in order to get syntax highlighting and code hints etc.
There are two ways to work on this project: either by working against an existing project or entirely through tests.
To run the developer version of both the language server and the VSCode extension:
- open the root of this repo in VSCode
- Go to the debugging panel
- Make sure "Run VSCode Extension" is selected, and hit run
This launches a new VSCode window and a watcher for your changes. In this dev window you can choose an existing Svelte project to work against. If you don't use pure Javascript and CSS, but languages like Typescript or SCSS, your project will need a Svelte preprocessor setup. When you make changes to the extension or language server you can use the command "Reload Window" in the VSCode command palette to see your changes. When you make changes to svelte2tsx
, you first need to run yarn build
within its folder.
You might think that as a language server, you'd need to handle a lot of back and forth between APIs, but actually it's mostly high-level JavaScript objects which are passed to the npm module vscode-languageserver.
This means it's easy to write tests for your changes:
yarn test
For tricker issues, you can run the tests with a debugger in VSCode by setting a breakpoint (or adding debugger
in the code) and launching the task: "Run tests with debugger".
- UnwrittenFun for creating the foundation which this language server, and the extensions are built on
- Vue's Vetur language server which heavily inspires this project
- halfnelson for creating
svelte2tsx