The official Lens Protocol React bindings for web applications.
This package enables you to build web applications on top of the Lens Protocol using React.
Install the Lens React Web SDK package using your package manager of choice:
Package Manager | Command |
---|---|
npm | npm install @lens-protocol/react-web@latest |
yarn | yarn add @lens-protocol/react-web@latest |
pnpm | pnpm add @lens-protocol/react-web@latest |
In the following examples we will show you integration with Wagmi and we will explain later how to integrate other libraries via custom bindings.
Install the Lens Wagmi bindings package and its peer dependencies.
Package Manager | Command |
---|---|
npm | npm install viem@2 wagmi@2 @tanstack/react-query@5 @lens-protocol/wagmi@latest |
yarn | yarn add viem@2 viem@2 wagmi@2 @tanstack/react-query@5 @lens-protocol/wagmi@latest |
pnpm | pnpm add viem@2 viem@2 wagmi@2 @tanstack/react-query@5 @lens-protocol/wagmi@latest |
Follow the Wagmi documentation to create the Wagmi configuration.
import { createConfig, http } from 'wagmi';
import { polygon } from 'wagmi/chains';
const wagmiConfig = createConfig({
chains: [polygon],
transports: {
[polygon.id]: http(),
},
});
Next, use this configuration with the bindings
from the @lens-protocol/wagmi
package to generate the LensConfig object.
import { LensConfig, production } from '@lens-protocol/react-web';
import { bindings } from '@lens-protocol/wagmi';
const lensConfig: LensConfig = {
environment: production,
bindings: bindings(wagmiConfig),
};
Now, wrap your app with the <LensProvider>
component and pass the LensConfig
object you created earlier.
import { LensProvider } from '@lens-protocol/react-web';
import { QueryClient, QueryClientProvider } from '@tanstack/react-query';
import { WagmiProvider } from 'wagmi';
const queryClient = new QueryClient();
function App() {
return (
<WagmiProvider config={wagmiConfig}>
<QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
<LensProvider config={lensConfig}>
<YourApp />
</LensProvider>
</QueryClientProvider>
</WagmiProvider>
);
}
You can create custom bindings for your own Signer
and Provider
by implementing the {@link IBindings} interface.
An example of how to create custom bindings for a Wallet
from ethers.js
import { InfuraProvider, Wallet } from 'ethers';
import { IBindings } from '@lens-protocol/react-web';
const provider = new providers.InfuraProvider('maticmum');
const wallet = new Wallet('<your-private-key>', provider);
const bindings: IBindings = {
getProvider: () => provider,
getSigner: () => wallet,
};
These are some common issues you may run into while using @lens-protocol/react
. If you encounter something not listed here try searching for GitHub issues.
You might see your Next.js failing with an error like this:
Error: Directory import '[...]/node_modules/@apollo/client/link/context' is not supported resolving ES modules imported from [...]/node_modules/@lens-protocol/api-bindings/dist/index.js
Did you mean to import @apollo/client/link/context/context.cjs?
The root cause is the lack of ESM support from Apollo Client which manifests itself when imported as sub-dependency of @lens-protocol/api-bindings
(which in turn is imported by @lens-protocol/react
). See open Apollo Client issue.
To fix it you need to edit you next.config.js
so to make sure the Lens SDK and its sub-dependencies a transpiled by Next.js build pipeline.
const nextConfig = {
transpilePackages: ['@lens-protocol'],
};
For further details on how to integrate Lens SDK with a Next.js app, there is a working Next.js example in this monorepo: https://github.com/lens-protocol/lens-sdk/tree/main/examples/nextjs