I just ejected from expo and everything went well but I'm now getting the following error when trying to run my ios app in Xcode :
No visible #interface for 'RCTAsyncLocalStorage' declares the selector
'initWithStorageDirectory:'
Here is part of my package.json
"dependencies": {
"axios": "^0.17.1",
"expo": "^23.0.6",
"lodash": "^4.17.4",
"moment": "^2.20.1",
"react": "16.0.0",
"react-native": "0.50.3",
"react-native-cloudinary": "^1.0.1",
"react-native-communications": "^2.2.1",
"react-native-elements": "^0.18.5",
"react-native-fetch-blob": "^0.10.8",
"react-native-gifted-chat": "^0.3.0",
"react-native-image-picker": "^0.26.7",
"react-native-image-to-base64": "^0.1.0",
"react-native-modal-datetime-picker": "^4.13.0",
"react-native-router-flux": "^4.0.0-beta.24",
"react-navigation": "^1.0.0-beta.22",
"redux-thunk": "^2.2.0"
}
I actually managed to fix it, this is how:
I updated my "react-native" dependency to the latest one available:
"https://github.com/expo/react-native/archive/sdk-23.0.0.tar.gz"
I removed all dependency that I had installed by mistake in my previous expo app that actually required react-native link using the npm uninstall --save command:
react-native-image-to-base64, react-native-cloudinary
Then I also had to remove them from the General > Linked Frameworks and Libraries
Now it works! I'm having issues with the Facebook Login now but at least it doesn't crash my app.
Good luck to you.
I feel really dumb for not realizing it sooner, but I had this issue when I forgot to run yarn after switching branches with a different Expo version.
Hope that saves someone else some debugging.
I am trying to open, build and run someone else's Angular 4 project but I am not able to view the project when I run it my way. I don't see what is going wrong or what I should do now. I already had everything in place to use NPM and NodeJS
The steps I took were:
Open up the project
npm install
ng serve
The project compiles the right way. (I have an own Angular app and I know how this looks like) The console is showing:
'** NG Live Development Server is listening on localhost:4200, open your browser on http://localhost:4200 **'.
Then, when I opened up a web browser, I navigated to localhost:4200 and a web page with the following text were shown:
'Cannot GET /'
And on the console was the following text:
'GET http://localhost:4200/ 404 (Not Found)'
The project should work fine but I am not able to navigate to a working URL on the web page. Routing is set-up another way as I am used to doing this. In app.module.ts the following is implemented:
app.module.ts
const appRoutes: Routes = [
{ path: '', redirectTo: 'tree', pathMatch: 'full' },
{ path: 'admin', component: AdminPanelComponent, canActivate: [AuthGuard],
children: [{path:'', component: PanelComponent},{path: 'add', component:
AddTreeComponent}, {path:'manage-trees', component:ManageTreesComponent},
{path:'manage-users', component: ManageUsersComponent}, {path:'view-trees',
component: ViewTreeComponent}]},
{path:'tree', component: TreeComponent},
{path:'error', component: ErrorComponent},
{path:'unauthorized', component: UnauthorizedComponent},
{path:'login', component: LoginComponent},
{path:'entire-tree', component: EntireTreeComponent},
{ path: '**', component: PageNotFoundComponent },
];
Also opening up a web page like; localhost:4200/tree does not work. When I let angular stop serving the web page, the web page displays: "this site can't be reached'. So I think there is running something at localhost:4200... Also, another project of this person behaves the same way.
Does anybody know what is going on?
EDIT
app.module.ts
RouterModule.forRoot(appRoutes, { useHash: true })
Package.json
{
"name": "xxx",
"version": "0.0.0",
"license": "MIT",
"scripts": {
"ng": "ng",
"start": "ng serve",
"build": "ng build",
"test": "ng test",
"lint": "ng lint",
"e2e": "ng e2e"
},
"private": true,
"dependencies": {
"#angular/animations": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/common": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/compiler": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/core": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/forms": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/http": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/platform-browser": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/platform-browser-dynamic": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/router": "^4.0.0",
"angular-oauth2-oidc": "^1.0.20",
"angular-polyfills": "^1.0.1",
"angular2-jwt": "^0.2.3",
"angular2-spinner": "^1.0.10",
"bootstrap": "^3.3.7",
"core-js": "^2.4.1",
"ngx-bootstrap": "^1.8.0",
"rxjs": "^5.1.0",
"zone.js": "^0.8.4"
},
"devDependencies": {
"#angular/cli": "1.2.4",
"#angular/compiler-cli": "^4.0.0",
"#angular/language-service": "^4.0.0",
"#types/jasmine": "2.5.45",
"#types/node": "~6.0.60",
"codelyzer": "~3.0.1",
"jasmine-core": "~2.6.2",
"jasmine-spec-reporter": "~4.1.0",
"karma": "~1.7.0",
"karma-chrome-launcher": "~2.1.1",
"karma-cli": "~1.0.1",
"karma-jasmine": "~1.1.0",
"karma-jasmine-html-reporter": "^0.2.2",
"karma-coverage-istanbul-reporter": "^1.2.1",
"protractor": "~5.1.2",
"ts-node": "~3.0.4",
"tslint": "~5.3.2",
"typescript": "~2.3.3"
}
}
I also see an icon next to the tab name with the label: "Error".
OBSERVATION:
New observation:
After I ran npm install -g angular-cli I wasn't able to run ng serve. (You have to be inside an angular-cli project in order to use the build command after reinstall of angular-cli)
Then I ran npm install -g #angular/cli#latest and I was able to use ng serve again.
OBSERVATION 2:
After building the app with: 'ng build ...' there is no index.html in the 'dist' folder... When I set the website online, there is just a folder structure instead of a nice website. I think that's because there is no index.html.
The way I resolved this error was by finding and fixing the error that the console reported.
Run ng build in your command line/terminal, and it should display a useful error, such as the example in red here: Property 'name' does not exist on type 'object'.
For me it also was problem with path, but I had percentage sign in the root folder.
After I replaced %20 with space, it started to work :)
The problem was that I ran the commands within the folder /project/src/app. Navigating back to the project folder so to /project and running ng serve from there solved my problem.
I had the same error caused by build errors. I ran ng build in the directory of my application which helped me correct my errors
I had the same problem with an Angular 9.
In my case, I changed the angular.json file from
"aot": true
To
"aot": false
It works for me.
Check if in index.html base is set
<head>
<base href="/">
...
</head>
I was using export class TestCalendar implements OnInit{} but i did not write the function
ngOnInit() {
/* Display initial */
}
. After running the command ng serve , i found out that i was not using ngOnInit(){} . Once i implemented, it started working fine. Hope it helps someone.
Just figured out the reason when we type "ng serve" INSIDE OUR PROJECT..
for example C:\Users\EdgeTech1\Desktop\CSharp\WebAPI\MyProject>ng serve
could not resolve module C:\Users\EdgeTech1\Desktop\C
results: failed compiled
root cause:
My folder name was C# Project..
Note: I tried to remove the # in my Project Name, I rename C# Project to CSharp instead and I tried to open cmd prompt again, typed the same thing..
for example:
C:\Users\EdgeTech1\Desktop\CSharp\WebAPI\MyProject>ng serve
and my project compiled successfully.. so as much as possible avoid ASCII characters in naming projects files.
I had the same problem with an Angular 6+ app and ASP.NET Core 2.0
I had just previously tried to change the Angular app from CSS to SCSS.
My solution was to go to the src/angularApp folder and running ng serve. This helped me realize that I had missed changing the src/styles.css file to src/styles.scss
I was referring to one of my provider with two different casing. One of them was wrong but only the webpack compiler was complaining. I had to step into the ClientApp folder and use ng build or ng serve to see the errors. (ASP.NET Core SPA with Angular 5)
Check baseHref is set to "/" ( angular.cli )
"architect": {
"build": {
"builder": "#angular-devkit/build-angular:browser",
"options": {
"baseHref": "/"
if it didn't work, check if your base href in your index.html is set to "/"
For me the issue was with #Component Selector path was pointing to wrong path. After changing it solved the issue.
#Component({
selector: 'app-fetch-data',
templateUrl: './fetch-data.component.html',
providers: [ToolbarService, GroupService, FilterService, PageService, ExcelExportService, PdfExportService]
})
This error can apparently happen for a number of reasons. Here is my experience for those who land here after searching for "Cannot GET /"
I experienced this error when I installed ng-bootstrap v6 into an Angular 8 project. I downgraded ng-bootstrap to v5 and it seems to be okay now, since ng-bootstrap v6 is only compatible with Angular 9.
This happened while working in Visual Studio 2019 with the Angular .NET Core template. At the same time, the output panel of Visual Studio displayed this esoteric sounding error: "TS1086: An accessor cannot be declared in ambient context," which led me here, which, after a little reading, made me think it was a versioning issue. It appears that it was.
I fixed it by changing "#ng-bootstrap/ng-bootstrap": "^6.0.0"," to "#ng-bootstrap/ng-bootstrap": "^5.0.0" in the package.json file and rebuilding.
if you changed any name or file component , check if it is the right name
#NgModule({
declarations: [
NewNameComponent
],
imports: [
CommonModule,
],
exports:[
NewNameComponent
]
})
export class YourModule { }
Generally it is a versioning issue. Node.js v8 cannot compile with angular-cli 6.0 or later. angularcli v6 and above will work for lastest node versions. Please make sure if your node version is v8, then you need to install angular-cli upto 1.7.4.
enter ng -v command in cmd and check the cli and node versions.
See this answer here. You need to redirect all routes that Node is not using to Angular:
app.get('*', function(req, res) {
res.sendfile('./server/views/index.html')
})
You can see the errors after stopping debbuging by choosing the option to display ASP.NET Core Web Server output in the output window.
In my case I was pointing to a different templateUrl.
First, delete existing files package.lock.json and node_modules from your project.
Then, the first step is to write npm cache clean --force. Second, also write this command npm i on the terminal. This process resolve my error. :D
Many answers dont really make sense but still have upvotes, makes me currious why that would still work in some cases.
In angular.json
"serve": {
"builder": "#angular-devkit/build-angular:dev-server",
"options": {
"deployUrl": "/",
"baseHref": "/",
worked for me.
For me the problem was that I had saved my project folder under C:\Users\... which indeed is a problem. After I saved it under C:\ then npm install and ng serve --open it worked just fine!
In my angular.json file the deployUrl was set to static/ang.
"architect": {
"build": {
"builder": "#angular-devkit/build-angular:browser",
"options": {
"deployUrl": "/static/ang/",
....
This was causing my application to get served from localhost:4200/static/ang
Removing deployUrl fixed it for me.
EDIT:
I shifted deployUrl to under configurations since it was important when building for production. (Since my lazy loaded chunks were not getting served on the static url).
"architect": {
"build": {
"builder": "#angular-devkit/build-angular:browser",
"options": {
....
....
},
"configurations": {
"deployUrl": "/static/ang/",
Bumped into same issue, I tried this:
-ng build
And it worked!
Another problem may be that you're importing the component instead of it's module.
imports: [
YourComponent, // <-- Should be YourComponentModule
]
For me the problem was that the Angular project was not getting compiled when executing because of some undelared variable in the ts file which was binded to an html tag.
You can use ng serve --verbose true to display the build log in terminal to check where the application is breaking.
The weird thing that I was experiencing was that I could make changes to the components in Visual Studio 2019 while the app was running and see my changes but, when I restarted the app, I got the Cannot Get / error. Instead of running IIS Express, I chose to run the app using Angular JS and the build window showed me that there was an error in app.component.ts. It turned out to be an extra } at the end of the file. Not sure how it got there but, when I removed it, the app works fine.
For me the issue was that my local CLI was not the same version as my global CLI - updating it by running the following command solved the problem:
npm install --save-dev #angular/cli#latest
Deleting node modules folder worked for me.
Delete the node modules folder
Run npm install.
Re-run the application and it should work.
With almost every npm package that I'm trying to use with vue.js 1.0 I receive this error:
{ Error: Cannot find module '!!./../../../node_modules/css-loader/index.js!./../../../node_modules/vue-loader/lib/style-rewriter.js!./../../../node_modules/vue-loader/lib/selector.js?type=style&index=0!./dashboard.vue' from '/Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/vue-html5-editor/dist'
at /Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:46:17
at process (/Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:173:43)
at ondir (/Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:188:17)
at load (/Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:69:43)
at onex (/Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:92:31)
at /Users/jamie/Code/forum/node_modules/resolve/lib/async.js:22:47
at FSReqWrap.oncomplete (fs.js:117:15)
It drives me nuts! I'm using vue.js with browserify. Looked everywhere on the web:
https://github.com/webpack/css-loader/issues/240
https://github.com/webpack/css-loader/issues/180
https://github.com/webpack/css-loader/issues/295
https://github.com/webpack/css-loader/issues/163
Nothing seems to work! What am I doing wrong!?
2 packages where I've this problem:
https://github.com/lian-yue/vue-upload-component/
https://github.com/PeakTai/vue-html5-editor
My gulpfile:
const elixir = require('laravel-elixir');
require('laravel-elixir-vueify');
require('laravel-elixir-stylus');
elixir(mix => {
mix.browserify('main.js');
mix.styles([
'./node_modules/normalize-css/normalize.css',
'./node_modules/nprogress/nprogress.css',
'./node_modules/sweetalert/dist/sweetalert.css',
]);
mix.stylus('app.styl');
});
A solution would really help me out.
--EDIT--
{
"private": true,
"scripts": {
"prod": "gulp --production",
"dev": "gulp watch"
},
"devDependencies": {
"gulp": "^3.9.1",
"laravel-elixir": "^6.0.0-9",
"laravel-elixir-browserify-official": "^0.1.3",
"laravel-elixir-stylus": "^2.0.3",
"vue-html5-editor": "^0.5.1"
},
"dependencies": {
"browserify": "^13.1.0",
"laravel-elixir-vueify": "^2.0.0",
"normalize-css": "^2.3.1",
"nprogress": "^0.2.0",
"stylus": "^0.54.5",
"sweetalert": "^1.1.3",
"vue": "^1.0.26",
"vue-resource": "^0.9.3",
"vue-router": "^0.7.13",
"vue-spinner": "^1.0.2",
"vue-upload-component": "^2.0.0-beta"
}
}
Those are webpack packages and you are using browserify. If you need to use webpack packages you should be using webpack as your bundler.
I did have a go at installing the vue-upload-component package to see how easy it would be with browserify and elixir but it's awkward to say the least. I didn't get it working because it uses babel transforms to compile the vue files, so first you need to pull them in manually and then you would likely need to write an elixir extension to use those transforms to get it to work. Obviously each webpack package will be different so you would need to do that each time you install one, which is hardly convenient.
I had some luck changing the configuration output of the Vue component I wanted to use to use webpack -p instead of just webpack.
I could then take that output without the hot module code and put it through browserify:
browserify file.js --standalone SomeLibrary > file.browser.js
Where file.js is the webpack -p output, SomeLibrary is the name you want on the global window scope from the browserify packaging, and file.browser.js is your resultant file to include in your project.