I am using Nuxt.js / Vuejs for my app, and I keep facing this error in different places:
The client-side rendered virtual DOM tree is not matching server-rendered content.
This is likely caused by incorrect HTML markup, for example nesting block-level elements inside <p>, or missing <tbody>.
Bailing hydration and performing full client-side render.
I would like to understand what is the best way to debug this error? Is their a way I can record/get the virtual DOM tree for client and server so I could compare and find where the error lies?
Mine is a large application and manually verifying is difficult.
Partial answer: with Chrome DevTools, you can localize the issue and see exactly what element caused the issue. Do the following (I did that with Nuxt 5.6.0 and Chrome 64.0.3282.186)
Show DevTools in Chrome (F12)
Load the page that causes "the client-side rendered virtual DOM tree..." warning.
Scroll to the warning in DevTools console.
Click at the source location hyperlink of the warning (in my case it was vue.runtime.esm.js:574).
Set a breakpoint there (left-clicking at line number in the source code browser).
Make the same warning to appear again. I'm not saying it is always possible, but in my case I simply reloaded the page. If there are many warnings, you can check the message by moving a mouse over msg variable.
When you found your message and stopped on a breakpoint, look at the call stack. Click one frame down to call to "patch" to open its source. Hover mouse over hydrate function call 4 lines above the execution line in patch. Hyperlink to the source of hydrate would open.
In the hydrate function, move about 15 lines from the start and set a breakpoint where false is returned after assertNodeMatch returned false. Set the breakpoint there and remove all other breakpoints.
Make the same warning to happen again. Now, when breakpoint is hit, execution should stop in the hydrate function. Switch to DevTools console and evaluate elm and then vnode. Here elm seem to be a server-rendered DOM element while vnode is a virtual DOM node. Elm is printed as HTML so you can figure out where the error happened.
For me this error happened cuz get Array list in AsyncData and rendered <tr> tags by v-for, i put v-for codes in <client-only> blocks and problem solved
This error can be really painfull to debug. In order to quickly get the element causing an issue edit node_modules/vue/dist/vue.esm.js and add the following lines :
// Search for this line:
function hydrate (elm, vnode, insertedVnodeQueue, inVPre) {
var i;
var tag = vnode.tag;
var data = vnode.data;
var children = vnode.children;
inVPre = inVPre || (data && data.pre);
vnode.elm = elm;
// Add the following lines:
console.log('elm', elm)
console.log('vnode', vnode)
console.log('inVpre', inVPre)
// ...
You will get in the console the failing node.
There are a lot of ways of fixing this issue, but most of them are not actual fixes, just hacky band-aids. To note a few:
wrap it into <client-only> tags, beware of some important details tho
using a v-show instead of a v-if
trying to hack some lifecycles
etc...
I highly recommend reading this gorgeous article written by Alexander Lichter
https://blog.lichter.io/posts/vue-hydration-error/
He'll explain you that you should diagnose why this happens and fix the actual issue.
Basically each time something is different from what was generated on the server and what is available when done hydrating on the client will cause this error.
Some of which are:
invalid HTML (having a block element inside of a <p>, same goes for an a tag nested into another, etc...)
3rd party scripts messing around with your components
different state on server vs client
any random is risky (new Date() for example)
any page related to authentication
I highly recommend reading the article to understand in Alexandre's own words how to handle this kind of issue. If you're in a hurry you could always use one band-aid fix but try to actually fix the issue for the best performance and to keep the code clean.
I had the same issue as of nuxt version 2.14.0 while implementing vue-particles package. The fix was to surround the tags with no-ssr and it fixed the issue.
EDIT:
Updated variant of the solution (if Nuxt version is above 2.9.0)
<client-only>
<vue-particles>
</vue-particles>
</client-only>
Old solution:
<no-ssr>
<vue-particles>
</vue-particles>
</no-ssr>
Thanks to budden73's answer, I did a little improvement on the debug process.
Open dev tool
click on the warn message, and click on the first line of the warn message, you will be directed to the Sources panel, with a file name vue.runtime.esm.js?xxxx
ctrl+f to search the above file for assertNodeMatch, not the function, but like:
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') {
if (!assertNodeMatch(elm, vnode, inVPre)) {
return false
}
}
Add a break point at the line return false
Refresh the page, and the breakpoint will be triggered.
At the right side of the Sources panel, Under Scope->Local, click on the elm element, you will be directed back to the Elements panel.
The above element is the client side rendered element, compare with your code to see the difference.
If you can't find the source of the bug, the brutal way to fix it is using nuxt's <client-only> tag.
Another likely brutal way is described here. Add an isHydrate variable which default is false, set to true in mounted hook, and render the element after the variable set to true.
For Nuxt version above 2.10 it doesn't need to install nothing, just use the default component <client-only> as mentioned https://nuxtjs.org/api/components-client-only/.
Check the previous warning:
In "nuxt": "^2.12.2", You can spot the cause easily from the previous warning.
In my case:
Incorrect
<nuxt-link to="/game42day">
<a>Game For Today</a>
</nuxt-link>
Correct:
<nuxt-link to="/game42day">
Game For Today
</nuxt-link>
If you're rendering a component conditionally with v-if, then you have two options to solve the problem:
The first one is wrapping the element in <no-ssr></no-ssr> tag.
The second approach is replacing v-if with v-show, here is the link to Vue docs.
Turns out, in my case, I had HTML comment tags , which was causing this stupid, annoying error. Took me too long to figure it out but in case it helps someone.
In my case I had to change this:
<v-expansion-panel-header v-text="name" />
to this:
<v-expansion-panel-header>{{ name }}</v-expansion-panel-header>
I also get many errors due to this problem. I list two cases I often encounter, hope can help you.
With vuetify button, when you create a common component, you should use: <v-btn>{{text}}</v-btn>. Example:
<template>
<v-btn
:width="width"
:color="color"
:class="[rounded ? 'rounded-pill' : 'rounded-lg',textColor]"
v-on:click="onClick"
elevation="0"
:outlined="outlined"
:type="type"
:name="name"
:form="form"
:disabled="disabled"
v-bind="$attrs"
>{{ text }}</v-btn>
</template>
Don't use v-html with <p> tag.
Not use: <p v-html='html'></p>.
Use: <div v-html='html'></div>.
Besides, if you use <client-only></client-only>, this problem is definitely solved, but if you need to SEO page or show google ads, it is not good solution.
Ok this is going to sound silly. I tried a bunch of different solutions for about 15 mins such as restarting the server and deleting the .nuxt directory but I was too lazy to use #budden73's big brain solution. What ended up working for me was simply restarting my computer, give it a shot.
What I have found so far from observation is that when you are using third party packages like jQuery (specially), they sometimes inject html tags into the dom. So Vue/Nuxt looses track of the dom tree and starts complaining.
I was having the same problem and after a while I removed all jQuery and replaced jQuery functionality with Vuejs and those error were all gone.
See here for an example of how to deal with integrations (e.g. Google Analytics or FB Pixel) that modify the DOM. Basically create a plugin and exclude from SSR.
https://nuxtjs.org/faq/ga
What about:
extend (config, ctx) {
config.resolve.symlinks = false
}
See this [Vue warn]: The client-side rendered virtual DOM tree is not matching server-rendered content ( Nuxt / Vue / lerna monorepo )
Now that you found the code causing the problem, the first thing you should do is to verify that your markup (possibly coming from an API) is valid. Code like <p><p>Text</p></p> is not valid because a p element doesn’t allow other block elements (like a paragraph tag) inside.
Be aware, that tags are not allowed to have block level elements like <div> or <p> as children. These <span> tags are used default tag for Vue’s transitions though. You can change that though via <Transition tag="div">.
Check if have used any block-level element inside the inline element.
for example: inside , inside
If you have used an HTML table make sure you have used the tag
In my case, I changed my codes from
<p v-html="$md.render(post.content)"></p>
to
<p>{{ $md.render(post.content) }}</p>
In my case this problem was caused by markdownit module, I solved it by changing the html markup used with v-html. I was with <p> at the beginning and I ended with <div>.
I have some <p> in my v-html render (with $md.render()) so take care if you have same problems with different markups.
I was building a scheduling app with react-big-calendar and I have noticed from React v17 onwards the resizable does not work because of the way react handles event changing.
this is the issue: https://github.com/jquense/react-big-calendar/issues/1785
I have seen in the comments that someone fixed this issue and made a pull request: https://github.com/jquense/react-big-calendar/pull/1857
My problem is that it is still not working, the resizable handles does not show up on the big calendar. I made sure I am using the latest version 0.33.6 and also tried to figure out where the user did the changes to events to fix the issue so that I can modify the package, but I noticed they both are completely different files, I wasn't able to find the event handlers in my node_modules/react-big-calendar so that I can make edits. So how do I fix this error? I cannot revert back to reactv16 because I must use v17 in my project.
Thanks in Advance! :)
Here's what my calendar looks like:
<DragAndDropCalendar
selectable
resizable
onEventDrop={onEventDrop}
onEventResize={resizeEvent}
localizer={localizer}
events={events}
onSelectSlot={handleSelect}
defaultView="week"
defaultDate={new Date()}
timeslots={2}
step={15}
popup
tooltipAccessor={(e) => e.title}
/>
</div>
I’m new in coding and i couldn’t get how to fix the issue after i googled many times. The issue is i have a layout component which contains 4 different components. When i call a function in a function component it affects the others and the others re-render. Re-render is fine tho however my images are flickering on mobile browser. I would like to remove the flickering of the image loading. I’ve tried using React.memo() and useCallBack() but both of them didn’t work for me. I hope I made myself clear , thanks in advance
This is my app https://stackblitz.com/github/mithatercann/qrmenu
You are using what's its called "Prop Drilling". The better solution for your current problem is to implement some state management in your app, they are many third libraries for that, but for this instance and if your app is small you can use React Context API. If you're going to build big apps then I recommend implementing Redux.
TL;DR: need to find UI element from website on React JS code
Basically I'm working on a project where I need to put id tags on certain ui elements in a website. The code is written in React JS but there are a lot of pages and I cannot find which one each ui element is in. Is there a way that I can use chrome dev tools while on the website to find what page the code is for each specific ui element?
(Sorry if the terminology is wrong/confusing, I'm new to coding)
I'm not ok if I understand what you want, but if you wanna to get UI elements that exists inside React Component, I suggest you to use React Dev Tools:
https://github.com/facebook/react-devtools
If you want more help, please share a code snippet to try to help you more
I am using semantic-ui react to render a table of data. My requirement is that when the page is on mobile view, I hide certain columns. I tried using className="mobile hidden" on the Table.Cell element but this doesn't seem to work at all.
Then I tried using the Responsive component like below but I am getting an error. Am I missing something here? Unable to find anyone else having this issue ...
<Responsive as={Table.Cell} minWidth={Responsive.onlyMobile.minWidth}>
{record.datapoint}
</Responsive>
I get this error in the console when resizing the window...
index.js:2177 Warning: Can only update a mounted or mounting component. This usually means you called setState, replaceState, or forceUpdate on an unmounted component. This is a no-op.
Please check the code for the Responsive component.
In fact, this is bug :( I've created PR that will solve described issue, see Semantic-Org/Semantic-UI-React#2421.
Code that you provided doesn't reproduce problem, the issue will be never occured with provided example. However, it exists :) The core problem is the unmount of Responsive component when it will be done by parent and setState() will be called on unmouted component. An example on codesandbox reproduces problem.