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svelte/site/content/blog/2017-08-07-the-easiest-way-to-get-started.md

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---
title: The easiest way to get started with Svelte
description: This'll only take a minute.
author: Rich Harris
authorURL: https://twitter.com/Rich_Harris
---
Svelte is a [new kind of framework](/blog/frameworks-without-the-framework). Rather than putting a `<script src='svelte.js'>` tag on the page, or bringing it into your app with `import` or `require`, Svelte is a compiler that works behind the scenes to turn your component files into beautifully optimised JavaScript.
Because of that, getting started with it can be a little bit confusing at first. How, you might reasonably ask, do you make a Svelte app?
## 1. Use the REPL
The [Svelte REPL](/repl) is the easiest way to begin. You can choose from a list of examples to get you started, and tweak them until they do what you want.
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<aside><p>You'll need to have <a href="https://nodejs.org/">Node.js</a> installed, and know how to use the terminal</p></aside>
At some point, your app will outgrow the REPL. Click the **download** button to save a `svelte-app.zip` file to your computer and uncompress it.
Open a terminal window and set the project up...
```bash
cd /path/to/svelte-app
npm install
```
...then start up a development server:
```bash
npm run dev
```
This will serve your app on [localhost:5000](http://localhost:5000) and rebuild it with [Rollup](https://rollupjs.org) every time you make a change to the files in `svelte-app/src`.
## 2. Use degit
When you download from the REPL, you're getting a customised version of the [sveltejs/template](https://github.com/sveltejs/template) repo. You can skip messing around with zip files by using [degit](https://github.com/Rich-Harris/degit), a project scaffolding tool.
In the terminal, you can instantly create a new project like so:
```bash
npx degit sveltejs/template my-svelte-project
cd my-svelte-project
# to use TypeScript run:
# node scripts/setupTypeScript.js
npm install
npm run dev
```
This will create a new project in the `my-svelte-project` directory, install its dependencies, and start a server on http://localhost:5000.
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You can find more information about using TypeScript [here](/blog/svelte-and-typescript).
Once you've tinkered a bit and understood how everything fits together, you can fork [sveltejs/template](https://github.com/sveltejs/template) and start doing this instead:
```bash
npx degit your-name/template my-new-project
```
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And that's it! Do `npm run build` to create a production-ready version of your app, and check the project template's [README](https://github.com/sveltejs/template/blob/master/README.md) for instructions on how to easily deploy your app to the web with [Vercel](https://vercel.com) or [Surge](http://surge.sh/).
You're not restricted to using Rollup — there are also integrations for [webpack](https://github.com/sveltejs/svelte-loader), [Browserify](https://github.com/tehshrike/sveltify) and others, or you can use the [Svelte CLI](https://github.com/sveltejs/svelte-cli) (Update from 2019: with Svelte 3 the CLI was deprecated and we now use [sirv-cli](https://www.npmjs.com/package/sirv-cli) in our template. Feel free to use whatever tool you like!) or the [API](https://github.com/sveltejs/svelte/tree/v2#api) directly. If you make a project template using one of these tools, please share it with the [Svelte Discord chatroom](chat), or via [@sveltejs](https://twitter.com/sveltejs) on Twitter!