Basic Svelte
Introduction
Bindings
Classes and styles
Advanced Svelte
Advanced reactivity
Motion
Advanced bindings
Advanced transitions
Context API
Special elements
<script module>
Next steps
Basic SvelteKit
Introduction
Routing
Loading data
Headers and cookies
Shared modules
API routes
$app/state
Errors and redirects
Advanced SvelteKit
Page options
Link options
Advanced routing
Advanced loading
Environment variables
Conclusion
SvelteKit makes three readonly state objects available via the $app/state module — page, navigating and updated. The one you’ll use most often is page, which provides information about the current page:
- url— the URL of the current page
- params— the current page’s parameters
- route— an object with an- idproperty representing the current route
- status— the HTTP status code of the current page
- error— the error object of the current page, if any (you’ll learn more about error handling in later exercises)
- data— the data for the current page, combining the return values of all- loadfunctions
- form— the data returned from a form action
Each of these properties is reactive, using $state.raw under the hood. Here’s an example using page.url.pathname:
src/routes/+layout
<script>
	import { page } from '$app/state';
	let { children } = $props();
</script>
<nav>
	<a href="/" aria-current={page.url.pathname === '/'}>
		home
	</a>
	<a href="/about" aria-current={page.url.pathname === '/about'}>
		about
	</a>
</nav>
{@render children()}<script lang="ts">
	import { page } from '$app/state';
	let { children } = $props();
</script>
<nav>
	<a href="/" aria-current={page.url.pathname === '/'}>
		home
	</a>
	<a href="/about" aria-current={page.url.pathname === '/about'}>
		about
	</a>
</nav>
{@render children()}Prior to SvelteKit 2.12, you had to use
$app/storesfor this, which provides a$pagestore with the same information. If you’re currently using$app/stores, we advise you to migrate towards$app/state(requires Svelte 5).
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<h1>home</h1>
<p>this is the home page.</p>