Next.js runs on server side also, so Peer.js raise error when using Next.js. Here one says: https://stackoverflow.com/a/66292100/239219
this is probably because peer js is performing some side effect during import.
He propose this:
useEffect(() => {
import('peerjs').then(({ default: Peer }) => {
// Do your stuff here
});
}, [])
But I need DataConnection
as using Typescript, and also asign it to a useState. would you show an example how?
This is what I put togeter, but TypesScript raise errors:
useEffect(() => {
import('peerjs').then(({ default: Peer, DataConnection }) => {
const peer = new Peer(localStorage.token)
peer.on('connection', (conn: DataConnection) => {
console.log('Connected to peer:', conn)
conn.on('data', (data) => {
console.log('Received data:', data)
})
})
return () => {
peer.destroy()
}
})
}, [])
like: 'DataConnection' refers to a value, but is being used as a type here. Did you mean 'typeof DataConnection'?
CodePudding user response:
You can use a type-only import (introduced in version 3.8) at the top of the file:
import type { DataConnection } from "peerjs";
This import will be erased in the output, so rest assured that this will not import it "early".
Or if that doesn't fancy you, you can also "inline" the import:
peer.on('connection', (conn: import("peerjs").DataConnection) => {
Looks weird, but when import(...)
is used as a type, it resolves to the namespace that importing the module would give you.