Fullstack Svelte with SvelteKit vs JavaScript: The Hard Parts, v2
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Fullstack Svelte with SvelteKit
Frontend Masters · Web Development
JavaScript: The Hard Parts, v2
Per-criterion
Nearly 5 hours of content (4h 52m) split across four structured sections: Introduction, SvelteKit Basics (routing, data loading, forms, API routes, stores, error handling), Advanced SvelteKit (hooks, link options, advanced routing and loading patterns), and a complete SvelteFlix project build (carousels, search, infinite scrolling, caching). The curriculum aligns with the current SvelteKit production stack and avoids legacy patterns. Published June 13, 2023 and compatible with Svelte 3 and 4. One gap noted by reviewers: Svelte 5 runes syntax is not covered, since the course predates Svelte 5's stable release.
Rich Harris is the creator of both Svelte and Rollup, and a software engineer at Vercel. Teaching the framework you invented gives unparalleled depth: Harris explains architectural decisions and trade-offs, not just API syntax. The Frontend Masters platform awarded the course a 4.8/5 rating based on student reviews. Independent reviewers consistently note that learning directly from the framework's author accelerates understanding of the "why" behind SvelteKit's design choices — something no third-party instructor can replicate. Minor critique: Harris assumes a reasonable level of JavaScript comfort and does not slow down for absolute beginners.
Access requires a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month or ~$390/year) rather than a one-time purchase. Strong value if you use the subscription for multiple courses — Frontend Masters covers the full frontend stack (JavaScript, TypeScript, React, CSS, Node.js, and dozens of other tracks) and has a companion Svelte Fundamentals course by the same instructor. Weak value for learners who want only this one course. No free tier beyond a short preview. The subscription cost is the dominant complaint across otherwise positive reviews.
Frontend Masters provides written transcripts for every lesson, a downloadable course notes PDF, and public GitHub repositories for the SvelteFlix project used in the course. Community support runs through the Frontend Masters Discord. There is no dedicated course forum or live Q&A with Harris himself post-recording. Reviewers who took the course report that the SvelteKit official documentation and Discord are the primary support channels for issues beyond the course material — typical for Frontend Masters workshop courses where the instructor is not actively engaged post-recording.
The course covers file-system routing, server-side data loading, form actions with progressive enhancement, API route creation (GET/POST/PUT/DELETE), SvelteKit stores, server hooks, caching strategies, and environment variables — all features used in production SvelteKit applications. The SvelteFlix capstone integrates a real third-party API (The Movie Database) and demonstrates infinite scrolling and client-side caching patterns. The main real-world gap is authentication: no auth implementation is covered, which is a common production requirement. Svelte 5 runes are also not included, but Svelte 4 apps are still widely deployed.
Goes deep on the JavaScript runtime model — thread of execution, the call stack, closure, the event loop, Promises and prototypes/classes — across roughly 6.5 hours. Reviewers consistently say it explains how JavaScript works "under the hood" rather than just syntax.
Will Sentance (Codesmith founder) is the most-praised element. Learners cite his blackboard diagrams, the "backpack" analogy for closure, and a Socratic, audience-paced delivery. The same intense, repetitive style is the one thing a minority find tiring.
Requires a $39/month Frontend Masters subscription rather than a one-time purchase — strong value if you use the wider catalog, weaker if you only want this one course. The course is included in the standard subscription.
This is a conceptual, exercise-and-whiteboard course, not a project build. There is no portfolio-worthy capstone, which some learners miss. The exercises are effective for drilling mental models but produce no artefact.
The mental models — call stack, closure, the event loop, async behaviour — directly explain bugs developers hit daily. Experienced developers report the course clarified concepts they had used for years without fully understanding.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.