833

I am getting this error:

Uncaught Error: Invariant Violation: Element type is invalid: expected a string (for built-in components) or a class/function (for composite components) but got: object.

This is my code:

var React = require('react')
var ReactDOM =  require('react-dom')
var Router = require('react-router')
var Route = Router.Route
var Link = Router.Link

var App = React.createClass({
  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <h1>App</h1>
        <ul>
          <li><Link to="/about">About</Link></li>
        </ul>
      </div>
    )
  }
})

var About = require('./components/Home')
ReactDOM.render((
  <Router>
    <Route path="/" component={App}>
      <Route path="about" component={About} />
    </Route>
  </Router>
), document.body)

My Home.jsx file:

var React = require('react');
var RaisedButton = require('material-ui/lib/raised-button');

var Home = React.createClass({
  render:function() {
    return (
        <RaisedButton label="Default" />
    );
  },
});

module.exports = Home;
6
  • 13
    Please take a look at stackoverflow.com/questions/36795819/… Mar 8, 2017 at 5:21
  • Possible duplicate of When should I use curly braces for ES6 import?
    – Jim G.
    Jun 1, 2018 at 16:39
  • This error can rise if you try to import a non-existent component. Make sure you have no typo and that the component indeed named that way. In case of libraries make sure you use the proper version, since components can have different names in different versions.
    – totymedli
    Jun 27, 2018 at 3:16
  • This can also happen when you define a property, maybe through ES6 destruction, with the same name as an already imported component (and try to pass it down to another component). Jan 4, 2019 at 21:46
  • This is happening to me as a result of using styled-components, and only server-side (using Next.js). For some reason, any const defined at the module level is magically undefined when referenced inside the React component. Could be a Rollup bug or a Node bug.
    – Steve
    Oct 15, 2021 at 9:55

54 Answers 54

1251

In my case (using Webpack) it was the difference between:

import {MyComponent} from '../components/xyz.js';

vs

import MyComponent from '../components/xyz.js';

The second one works while the first is causing the error. Or the opposite.

14
  • 110
    Googler from the future here, thanks this was my issue! It makes sense in retrospect as the first is destructuring the export, but if you used default, then it's just trying to destructure a function/class.
    – ebolyen
    Apr 5, 2016 at 20:10
  • 5
    For future people, my case was was a typo in the element name I was using. I changed <TabBarIOS.item> to <TabBarIOS.Item> Oct 25, 2016 at 4:32
  • 8
    Huge. Why is this the case?
    – lol
    Dec 19, 2016 at 10:27
  • 63
    For anyone still wondering why this works - {MyComponent} imports the export 'MyComponent' from the file '../components/xyz.js' - The second imports the default export from '../components/xyz.js'. Apr 5, 2017 at 10:15
  • 7
    <rant>That's just great: if I write import {App} from './App';, the error is './App' does not contain an export named 'App'., and if I remove the curly brackets, the error becomes Element type is invalid: expected a string ... but got: object.. Welcome to ES import hell.</rant>
    – Francois
    Jan 28, 2019 at 21:42
204

you need export default or require(path).default

var About = require('./components/Home').default
7
  • 2
    I had this issue with 'react-native-navbar'. I called default on the require and it fixed my issue. Thanks. Dec 23, 2015 at 23:29
  • 3
    Hmm, adding .default in my case solves the problem. However, I am actually export default Home extends Component on that class, so I would have expected it to work without the '.default'
    – Marc
    Mar 19, 2016 at 14:19
  • 3
    can u please explain the reason like what happens when we add default ? Jul 23, 2016 at 18:31
  • 1
    it worked but can can someone make an explanation about what .default does. Aug 15, 2016 at 8:40
  • 1
    @BurakKarasoy You need the .default since the standard way Babel build modules is to transform export default statements to exports.default so you have to use .default when you import the module. One way to get rid of that is to use babel-plugin-add-module-exports which restore the default behavior. Jan 27, 2017 at 14:57
59

Have you just modularized any of your React components? If yes, you will get this error if you forgot to specify module.exports, for example:

non-modularized previously valid component/code:

var YourReactComponent = React.createClass({
    render: function() { ...

modularized component/code with module.exports:

module.exports = React.createClass({
    render: function() { ...
4
  • 2
    Would it be the same to create the class and then export? Like your first snippet and then module.exports = YourReactComponent Apr 28, 2016 at 6:55
  • 3
    I was able to simplify this to: export default class YourReactComponent extends React.Component {
    – cpres
    May 13, 2016 at 4:43
  • Getting the same error. I am able to render it in one component but unable to render in another.
    – Ram_T
    Oct 3, 2016 at 12:04
  • Even I mentioned module.exports still getting the error
    – Ram_T
    Oct 3, 2016 at 12:46
38

In my case, one of the exported child module was not returning a proper react component.

const Component = <div> Content </div>;

instead of

const Component = () => <div>Content</div>;

The error shown was for the parent, hence couldn't figure out.

0
31

If you get this error, it might be because you're importing link using

import { Link } from 'react-router'

instead, it might be better to use

import { Link } from 'react-router-dom'
                      ^--------------^

I believe this is a requirement for the react router version 4

3
  • 1
    My friend was importing Link from react, instead of react-router-dom. Fixed the issue. Never seen this err message before.
    – O-9
    May 13, 2019 at 13:34
  • 1
    I faced the same error in a different project, and the problem was with the import statement of link.
    – Anupam
    Dec 26, 2020 at 16:55
  • 1
    Thankyou. I wasted 1 entire day figuring out which import/export was wrong. Finally this was what gave the error. I was migrating react-router v3 to v5
    – rahulxyz
    Feb 12, 2022 at 15:46
30

Given your error of:

'Uncaught Error: Invariant Violation: Element type is invalid: expected a string (for built-in components) or a class/function but got: object'

You have 2 options:

  1. Your export file can have the word default as in
export default class someNameHere

Then your import will need to avoid using {} around it. As in

import somethingHere from someWhereHere
  1. Avoid using the default word. Then your export looks like
export class someNameHere

Then your import must use the {}. Like

import {somethingHere} from someWhereHere
5
  • 3
    Awesome answer!!! +1... I totally overlooked the export default {component name} and forgot to add it
    – Si8
    Jun 24, 2019 at 15:08
  • @Si8 Glad to be of service and thanks for making me smile first thing in the morning. Jun 25, 2019 at 19:08
  • Good answer. An explanation as to why that is so would really be helpful. Aug 14, 2021 at 15:20
  • 1
    Thank you, I was using export const Foo = () => {return ()} and completely forgot the keyword default Dec 22, 2021 at 20:35
  • 2
    @TimothyMacharia There are four forms of import declarations: 1. Named import: import { export1, export2 } from "module-name"; 2. Default import: import defaultExport from "module-name"; 3. Namespace import: import * as name from "module-name"; 4. Side effect import: import "module-name"; REF Oct 9, 2022 at 1:38
24

Don't get surprised by the list of answers for a single question. There are various causes for this issue;

For my case, the warning was

warning.js:33 Warning: React.createElement: type is invalid -- expected a string (for built-in components) or a class/function (for composite components) but got: undefined. You likely forgot to export your component from the file it's defined in. Check your code at index.js:13.

Followed by the error

invariant.js:42 Uncaught Error: Element type is invalid: expected a string (for built-in components) or a class/function (for composite components) but got: undefined. You likely forgot to export your component from the file it's defined in.

I couldn't understand the error since it doesn't mention any method or file name. I was able to resolve only after looking at this warning, mentioned above.

I have the following line at the index.js.

<ConnectedRouter history={history}>

When I googled for the above error with the keyword "ConnectedRouter" I found the solution in a GitHub page.

The error is because, when we install react-router-redux package, by default we install this one. https://github.com/reactjs/react-router-redux but not the actual library.

To resolve this error, install the proper package by specifing the npm scope with @

npm install react-router-redux@next

You don't need to remove the wrongly installed package. It will be automatically overwritten.

Thank you.

PS: Even warning helps you. Don't neglect warning just looking at the error alone.

1
  • Thank you your answer is great. The problem is not fully understood or resolved as you mentioned there are multiple reasons. In my case I had to use react-router-redux library but that alone was not sufficient, my jest was failing because I was using react-hot-loader, after removing hot(module) from "export default hot(module)(withRouter(MyComponent));" I was able to get my unit tests to run, which was my issue. Main code was never had the problem. So I assume some lib conflict with dependencies/jest/OS is the suspect. Oct 16, 2020 at 19:41
21

https://github.com/rackt/react-router/blob/e7c6f3d848e55dda11595447928e843d39bed0eb/examples/query-params/app.js#L4 Router is also one of the properties of react-router. So change your modules require code like that:

  var reactRouter = require('react-router')
  var Router = reactRouter.Router
  var Route = reactRouter.Route
  var Link = reactRouter.Link

If you want to use ES6 syntax the link use(import), use babel as helper.

BTW, to make your code works, we can add {this.props.children} in the App, like

render() {
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>App</h1>
      <ul>
        <li><Link to="/about">About</Link></li>
      </ul>
      {this.props.children}
    </div>

  )
}
1
  • Sorry for not test carefully last night, there is no problem in your Home component. Can you have a try what I just edited?
    – David Guan
    Dec 8, 2015 at 2:31
13

In my case, that was caused by wrong comment symbols. This is wrong:

<Tag>
    /*{ oldComponent }*/
    { newComponent }
</Tag>

This is correct:

<Tag>
    {/*{ oldComponent }*/}
    { newComponent }
</Tag>

Notice the curly brackets

12

I have the same error : ERROR FIX !!!!

I use 'react-router-redux' v4 but she's bad.. After npm install react-router-redux@next I'm on "react-router-redux": "^5.0.0-alpha.9",

AND IT'S WORK

0
10

I got this by doing import App from './app/'; expecting it to import ./app/index.js, but it instead imported ./app.json.

1
10

I was having the same issue and realized that I was providing an Undefined React component in the JSX markup. The thing is that the react component to render was dynamically calculated and it ended up being undefined!

The error stated:

Invariant Violation: Element type is invalid: expected a string (for built-in components) or a class/function (for composite components) but got: undefined. You likely forgot to export your component from the file it's defined in. Check the render method of C.,

The example producing this error:

var componentA = require('./components/A');
var componentB = require('./components/B');

const templates = {
  a_type: componentA,
  b_type: componentB
}

class C extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
  }
  
  // ...
  
  render() {
    //Let´s say that depending on the uiType coming in a data field you end up rendering a component A or B (as part of C)
    const ComponentTemplate = templates[this.props.data.uiType];
    return <ComponentTemplate></ComponentTemplate>
  }
  
  // ...
}

The problem was that an invalid "uiType" was provided and therefore this was producing undefined as result:

templates['InvalidString']

3
  • I seem to have a similar error with react-fine-uploader, but cant figure out anything(yet). It has a Gallery component which i am importing and it goes to its render method too but in that render error occurs, i am not sure if it is library issue or my issue as i ma quite new to react. Oct 3, 2017 at 10:00
  • Had a similar error where there was an error in a complex component. A simple debug method is to temporarily simplify the component, e.g. const MyComponent = () => <div>my component</div>; just to see if the imports work normally then.
    – metakermit
    Oct 10, 2017 at 10:32
  • It would be handy to be able to detect this, e.g. with a lint rule.
    – Will
    Sep 25, 2019 at 14:23
8

Just as a quick addition to this. I was having the same problem and while Webpack was compiling my tests and the application was running fine. When I was importing my component into the test file I was using the incorrect case on one of the imports and that was causing the same error.

import myComponent from '../../src/components/myComponent'

Should have been

import myComponent from '../../src/components/MyComponent'

Note that the import name myComponent depends on the name of the export inside the MyComponent file.

7

Had similar issue with React Native latest versions 0.50 and up.

For me it was a difference between:

import App from './app'

and

import App from './app/index.js'

(the latter fixed the issue). Took me hours to catch this weird, hard to notice nuance :(

7

In my case I was using the default export, but not exporting a function or React.Component, but just a JSX element, i.e.

Error:

export default (<div>Hello World!</div>)

Works :

export default () => (<div>Hello World!</div>)
6

Another possible solution, that worked for me:

Currently, react-router-redux is in beta and npm returns 4.x, but not 5.x. But the @types/react-router-redux returned 5.x. So there were undefined variables used.

Forcing NPM/Yarn to use 5.x solved it for me.

6

I ran into this error when I had a .jsx and .scss file in the same directory with the same root name.

So, for example, if you have Component.jsx and Component.scss in the same folder and you try to do this:

import Component from ./Component

Webpack apparently gets confused and, at least in my case, tries to import the scss file when I really want the .jsx file.

I was able to fix it by renaming the .scss file and avoiding the ambiguity. I could have also explicitly imported Component.jsx

1
  • 1
    You sir, are a life saver. In my case it was essentially Component.json (a data file).
    – tengen
    Jan 28, 2020 at 19:50
5

In my case, the import was happening implicitly due to a library.

I managed to fix it by changing

export class Foo

to

export default class Foo.

5

I got this error in react routing, problem was that I was using

<Route path="/" component={<Home/>} exact />

but it was wrong route requires component as a class/function so I changed it to

<Route path="/" component={Home} exact />

and it worked. (Just avoid the braces around the component)

1
  • In some different way, my solution was the inverse of you, :), but I thank you to open my eyes. Sep 20, 2019 at 3:35
4

And in my case I was just missing a semicolon at the import-decleration in one of my sub modules.

Fixed it by changing this:

import Splash from './Splash'

to this:

import Splash from './Splash';
1
  • 2
    Omg. Man, you saved my life. I really don't understand why builder doesn't report this to you tho.
    – Maki Vlach
    Apr 25, 2018 at 0:00
4

In addition to import/export issues mentioned. I found using React.cloneElement() to add props to a child element and then rendering it gave me this same error.

I had to change:

render() {
  const ChildWithProps = React.cloneElement(
    this.props.children,
    { className: `${PREFIX}-anchor` }
  );

  return (
    <div>
      <ChildWithProps />
      ...
    </div>
  );
}

to:

render() {
  ...
  return (
    <div>
      <ChildWithProps.type {...ChildWithProps.props} />
    </div>
  );
}

See the React.cloneElement() docs for more info.

4

For me, it was because my component wasn't exporting for some reason using the * notation, so I had to name the export explicitly

// index.ts
export * from "./Button"

to

// index.ts
export { Button } from "./Button"
3

I was getting this error also. The error was being caused by trying to export a component like this...

export default Component();

Instead of like this...

export default Component;

My understanding is that by adding the "()" at the end of the component, I was actually calling the function instead of just referencing it.

I did not see this in the answers above, but may have missed it. I hope it helps someone and saves some time. It took me a long time to pinpoint the source of this error!

1
  • Thank you for sharing this. That was exactly the problem I was facing. Sep 10, 2021 at 3:39
2

The problem can also be an alias used for a default export.

Change

import { Button as ButtonTest } from "../theme/components/Button";

to

import { default as ButtonTest } from "../theme/components/Button";

solved the issue for me.

2

I was the same problem because I did import incorrect library, so i checked the documentation from the library and the route was changed with the new versión, the solution was this:

import {Ionicons} from '@expo/vector-icons';

and I was writing the incorrect way:

import {Ionicons} from 'expo';
1
  • Yes, I want to shout this out too. We are all here from different angles I am sure. In my case, I had a library already installed (Stripe) and followed a guide from their website. They were using a new element that was not in the library I already had installed. Instead of a failed build due to the component not being there, my app built but when I manually checked the node_modules lib, the export I was trying to import in fact wasn't there. So I did an npm install modulename --latest and that fixed it. Seriously just check your node modules as unlikely as it seems.
    – Andy
    Oct 24, 2021 at 22:14
2

I was getting this issue too. My imports look fine, I could copy the contents of my copy and paste it where it was being used and that worked. But it was the reference to the component that was going wrong.

For me I just had to shut down expo and restart it.

2

Just want to add a case to this question. I walked around this issue by swapping the order of import, for example in my mixed of imports before:

import { Label } from 'components/forms/label';
import Loader from 'components/loader/loader';
...
import Select from 'components/select/select'; // <----- the error happen

After the change:

import Select from 'components/select/select'; // <----- Fixed
import { Label } from 'components/forms/label';
import Loader from 'components/loader/loader';
...
2

For Next JS

Restart your server ✅

I spent quite a lot of time debugging the issue.

I got the error when using clsx() for my className prop. The error goes away when removed clsx()

Searched for Next JS issues in clsx and vice versa. Didn't find any active/ past issues. So I just tried restarting the server, and it worked.

1

For me it was that my styled-components were defined after my functional component definition. It was only happening in staging and not locally for me. Once I moved my styled-components above my component definition the error went away.

1

It means some of your imported Components are wrongly declared or nonexistent

I had a similar issue, I did

import { Image } from './Shared'

but When I looked into the Shared file I didn't have an 'Image' component rather an 'ItemImage' Component

import { ItemImage } from './Shared';

This happens when you copy code from other projects ;)

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.