Often, a series of actions requires to perform when a component renders to DOM. For example, we need to call a function before updating or removing a component. To handle this, Svelte has built-in lifecycle methods like **onMount(), beforeUpdate, afterUpdate, onDestroy()**
.
In this article, we learn about the onMount()
lifecycle method of svelte. If you are a beginner, you must visit my old posts on Svelte.
Svelte creates, mounts, updates, and destroys a component. In short, every component has a lifecycle. The application makes and eventually destroys a svelte component.
The onMount()
method executes after the component renders to the DOM.
Create a new file OnMountComponent.svelte
, And add the following content
<script>
import { onMount } from 'svelte'
let tasks = []
const url = 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/'
onMount( async () => {
fetch(url)
.then( response => response.json() )
.then( data => { tasks = data } )
});
</script>
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Task Id</th>
<th>Task Name</th>
<th>Status</th>
</tr>
</thead>
{#each tasks as t}
<tr>
<td>{t.id}</td>
<td>{t.title}</td>
<td>{t.completed}</td>
</tr>
{/each}
</table>
We imported an onMount()
function and we use a public url https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/
to fetch the API. This is a public API for testing purpose, please do not abuse it.
Here we use an onMount() to get the data using the fetch API.
onMount( async () => {
fetch(url)
.then( response => response.json() )
.then( data => { tasks = data } )
});
We'll discuss fetch
API in different article.
Next is to import this component in the App.svelte.
<script>
import OnMountComponent from "./OnMountComponent.svelte";
</script>
<main>
<OnMountComponent />
</main>
<style>
main {
text-align: center;
padding: 1em;
max-width: 240px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
@media (min-width: 640px) {
main {
max-width: none;
}
}
</style>
Thats all for now. In this article, we learn how to the use onMount() function in Svelte to load the component in DOM. See you in the next article.
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