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  4. Supabase and Svelte Quickstart Guide

Supabase and Svelte Quickstart Guide

This example provides the steps to build a simple user management app (from scratch!) using Supabase and Svelte.

Rory Wilding user avatar by
Rory Wilding
·
Aug. 20, 22 · Tutorial
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This example provides the steps to build a simple user management app (from scratch!) using Supabase and Svelte. It includes:

  • Supabase Database: a Postgres database for storing your usage data.
  • Supabase Auth: users can sign in with magic links (no passwords, only email).
  • Supabase Storage: users can upload a photo.
  • Row Level Security: data is protected so that individuals can only access their own data.
  • Instant APIs: APIs will be automatically generated when you create your database tables.

By the end of this guide you'll have an app that allows users to log in and update some basic profile details:

basic profile details

GitHub

Whenever you get stuck at any point, take a look at this repo.

Project Set Up

Before we start building we're going to set up our Database and API. This is as simple as starting a new Project in Supabase and then creating a "schema" inside the database.

Create a Project

Go to app.supabase.com.

  1. Click on "New Project".
  2. Enter your project details.
  3. Wait for the new database to launch.

Set up the Database Schema

Now we are going to set up the database schema. We can use the "User Management Starter" quickstart in the SQL Editor, or you can just copy/paste the SQL from below and run it yourself.

SQL
 
-- Create a table for public "profiles"
create table profiles (
  id uuid references auth.users not null,
  updated_at timestamp with time zone,
  username text unique,
  avatar_url text,
  website text,

  primary key (id),
  unique(username),
  constraint username_length check (char_length(username) >= 3)
);

alter table profiles enable row level security;

create policy "Public profiles are viewable by everyone."
  on profiles for select
  using ( true );

create policy "Users can insert their own profile."
  on profiles for insert
  with check ( auth.uid() = id );

create policy "Users can update own profile."
  on profiles for update
  using ( auth.uid() = id );

-- Set up Realtime!
begin;
  drop publication if exists supabase_realtime;
  create publication supabase_realtime;
commit;
alter publication supabase_realtime add table profiles;

-- Set up Storage!
insert into storage.buckets (id, name)
values ('avatars', 'avatars');

create policy "Avatar images are publicly accessible."
  on storage.objects for select
  using ( bucket_id = 'avatars' );

create policy "Anyone can upload an avatar."
  on storage.objects for insert
  with check ( bucket_id = 'avatars' );

UI

  1. Go to the "SQL" section.
  2. Click "User Management Starter".
  3. Click "Run".

Get the API Keys

Now that you've created some database tables, you are ready to insert data using the auto-generated API. We just need to get the URL and anon key from the API settings.

  1. Go to the "SQL" section.
  2. Click "User Management Starter".
  3. Click "Run".

Building the App

Let's start building the Svelte app from scratch.

Initialize a Svelte App

We can use the Quickstart Svelte Template to initialize an app called supabase-svelte:

Shell
 
npx degit sveltejs/template supabase-svelte
cd supabase-svelte

Then let's install the only additional dependency: supabase-js

npm

Shell
 
npm install @supabase/supabase-js

Yarn

Shell
 
yarn add @supabase/supabase-js

And finally, we want to save the environment variables in a .env. All we need are the API URL and the anon key that you copied earlier.

Shell
 
env

SVELTE_APP_SUPABASE_URL=YOUR_SUPABASE_URL
SVELTE_APP_SUPABASE_ANON_KEY=YOUR_SUPABASE_ANON_KEY

Our app is almost functional, to make svelte work with supabase and .env files we first need to change the rollup.config.js file a bit. Supabase imports json files, to convert .json files to ES6 modules we need the @rollup/plugin-json install it by running:

npm

Shell
 
npm install --save-dev @rollup/plugin-json

Yarn

Shell
 
yarn add --save-dev dotenv @rollup/plugin-replace

and add these plugins to the rollup.config.js file.

JavaScript
 
 rollup.config.js

import { config } from 'dotenv';
  import replace from '@rollup/plugin-replace';
  import json from '@rollup/plugin-json'

  export default {
    plugins: [
    replace({
            __api: JSON.stringify({
                env: {
                    isProd: production,
                    ...config().parsed // attached the .env config
                }
            }),
            delimiters: ['', '']
        }),
        json(),
    // ...
    ],
    // ...
  }

Now that we have the API credentials in place, let's create a helper file to initialize the Supabase client. These variables will be exposed on the browser, and that's completely fine since we have Row Level Security enabled on our Database.

JavaScript
 
src/supabaseClient.js

import { createClient } from '@supabase/supabase-js'

const supabaseUrl = __api.env.SVELTE_APP_SUPABASE_URL
const supabaseAnonKey = __api.env.SVELTE_APP_SUPABASE_ANON_KEY

export const supabase = createClient(supabaseUrl, supabaseAnonKey)

And one optional step is to update the CSS file public/global.css to make the app look nice. You can find the full contents of this file here.

Set up a Login Component

Let's set up a Svelte component to manage logins and sign-ups. We'll use Magic Links, so users can sign in with their email without using passwords.

HTML
 
/src/Auth.svelte

<form class="row flex flex-center" on:submit|preventDefault={handleLogin}>
  <div class="col-6 form-widget">
    <h1 class="header">Supabase + Svelte</h1>
    <p class="description">Sign in via magic link with your email below</p>
    <div>
      <input
        class="inputField"
        type="email"
        placeholder="Your email"
        bind:value={email}
      />
    </div>
    <div>
      <input type="submit" class='button block' value={loading ? "Loading" : "Send magic link"} disabled={loading} />
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

User Store

To access the user information in other places, we use a writable store. Create a new file called sessionStore.js

JavaScript
 
src/sessionStore.js

import { writable } from 'svelte/store';

export const user = writable(false);

Account Page

After a user is signed in we can allow them to edit their profile details and manage their account. Let's create a new component for that called Profile.svelte.

HTML
 
src/Profile.svelte

<form use:getProfile class="form-widget" on:submit|preventDefault={updateProfile}>
  <div>
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input id="email" type="text" value={$user.email} disabled />
  </div>
  <div>
    <label for="username">Name</label>
    <input
      id="username"
      type="text"
      bind:value={username}
    />
  </div>
  <div>
    <label for="website">Website</label>
    <input
      id="website"
      type="website"
      bind:value={website}
    />
  </div>

  <div>
    <input type="submit" class="button block primary" value={loading ? 'Loading ...' : 'Update'} disabled={loading}/>
  </div>

  <div>
    <button class="button block" on:click={signOut} disabled={loading}>
      Sign Out
    </button>
  </div>
</form>

Launch!

Now that we have all the components in place, let's update App.svelte:

HTML
 
src/App.svelte

<div class="container" style="padding: 50px 0 100px 0;">
    {#if $user}
        <Profile />
    {:else}
        <Auth />
    {/if}
</div>

Once that's done, run this in a terminal window:

npm

Shell
 
npm run dev

Yarn

Shell
 
yarn dev

And then open the browser to localhost:5000 and you should see the completed app.

⚠️ WARNING: Svelte uses by default port 5000, Supabase uses port 3000. To change the redirection port for supabase go to: Authentication > Settings and change the Site Url to localhost:5000

Supabase + Svelt login via magic link

Bonus: Profile Photos

Every Supabase project is configured with Storage for managing large files like photos and videos.

Create an Upload Widget

Let's create an avatar for the user so that they can upload a profile photo. We can start by creating a new component:

HTML
 
src/Avatar.svelte

<div>
  {#if path}
    <img use:downloadImage
      {src}
      alt="Avatar"
      class="avatar image"
      style="height: {size}; width: {size};"
    />
  {:else}
    <div class="avatar no-image" style="height: {size}; width: {size};" />
  {/if}
  
  <div style="width: {size};">
    <label class="button primary block" for="single">
      {uploading ? 'Uploading ...' : 'Upload'}
    </label>
    <input
      style="visibility: hidden; position:absolute;"
      type="file"
      id="single"
      accept="image/*"
      bind:files
      on:change={uploadAvatar}
      disabled={uploading}
    />
  </div>
</div>

Add the New Widget

And then we can add the widget to the Account page:

HTML
 
src/Profile.svelte

<form use:getProfile class="form-widget" on:submit|preventDefault={updateProfile}>
  <!-- Add to body -->
  <Avatar bind:path={avatar_url} on:upload={updateProfile} />

  <!-- Other form elements -->
</form>

Next Steps

At this stage, you have a fully functional application!

  • Got a question? Ask here.
  • Sign in: app.supabase.com
Database JavaScript Quickstart guide Svelte Profile (engineering)

Published at DZone with permission of Rory Wilding. See the original article here.

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