2022-10-17
1134
#svelte
Sodeeq Elusoji
31784
Oct 17, 2022 ⋅ 4 min read

Should you use Svelte in production?

Sodeeq Elusoji Software developer, entrepreneur, table tennis player.

Recent posts:

Typescript or Zod for Validation?

TypeScript vs Zod: Clearing up validation confusion

Learn when to use TypeScript, Zod, or both for data validation. Avoid redundant checks and build safer, type-sound applications.

Alexander Godwin
Oct 6, 2025 ⋅ 3 min read
Wasm 3 Before GTA 6 LogRocket Article

We got Wasm 3.0 before GTA 6: Meet the web’s new engine

Discover how WebAssembly 3.0’s garbage collector, exception handling, and Memory64 transform Wasm into a true mainstream web platform.

Ikeh Akinyemi
Oct 3, 2025 ⋅ 2 min read

How to use AI to build accurate ShadCN components

AI agents often break shadcn/ui components with outdated docs or made-up props. The MCP server fixes this by giving live access to registries. In this tutorial, we’ll set it up and build a Kanban board to show it in action.

Chizaram Ken
Oct 3, 2025 ⋅ 5 min read
Rust Project for Web Services LogRocket Article

The best way to structure Rust web services

Learn how to structure Rust web services with clean architecture, Cargo workspaces, and modular crates for scalable, maintainable backends.

Jude Miracle
Oct 2, 2025 ⋅ 2 min read
View all posts

4 Replies to "Should you use Svelte in production?"

  1. Great article. It definitely makes me interested in checking out Swelte – at least to learn a new technology.

    One question though: Why are you using Angular 8 as a benchmark? We are now ok Angular 11. As of Angular 9 there is a new rendering engine for building and serving the app that significantly reduces all of the metric in the charts. I am curious to see how much better Angular now stands in comparison. Especially when coupled with Module Federation in Webpack 5 this will only make the size and speed much smaller.

  2. If i ignore performance and I want it for a side project and the most important aspect is simplicity of development and large ready made component base, and I have no experience with frontend which one would be the best to pick?

    1. Svelte will be a great option for simplicity, components are segmented in 3 parts (the script: the logic of the component, the html: the template of your component and the style: the css).
      The learning curve is very small and you’ll feel right at home in a matter of days.
      Svelte comes batterie-included, meaning you will have all the features out-of-the-box without the need to compare libraries/plugins, learn their docs, check their versionning and fixes, etc…

      A lot of people compare the experience with Vue in the sense that they are both developper-friendly but I prefer Svelte because Vue defines the component logic into JS Objects which quickly become confusing and therefore hard to scale. As far as features, all frameworks solves the same problems, they just use different approaches and it’s up to you to choose which one you like better. 🙂

  3. Great article, I myself has been using Svelte and it is AWESOME… One correction though, as of November 12th of 2021, Vercel is backing up Svelte

Leave a Reply