--- meta: title: Integrating with NextJS description: This page explains how to integrate Shoelace with a NextJS app. --- # Integrating with NextJS This page explains how to integrate Shoelace with a NextJS app. :::tip This is a community-maintained document. Please [ask the community](/resources/community) if you have questions about this integration. You can also [suggest improvements](https://github.com/shoelace-style/shoelace/blob/next/docs/tutorials/integrating-with-nextjs.md) to make it better. ::: ## Requirements This integration has been tested with the following: - Node: 16.13.1 - NextJS: 12.1.6 - Shoelace: 2.0.0-beta.74 ## Instructions To get started using Shoelace with NextJS, the following packages must be installed. ```bash yarn add @shoelace-style/shoelace copy-webpack-plugin next-compose-plugins next-transpile-modules ``` ### Enabling ESM Because Shoelace utilizes ESM, we need to modify our `package.json` to support ESM packages. Simply add the following to your root of `package.json`: ``` "type": "module" ``` There's one more step to enable ESM in NextJS, but we'll tackle that in our Next configuration modification. ### Importing the Default Theme The next step is to import Shoelace's default theme (stylesheet) in your `_app.js` file: ```css import '@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/themes/light.css'; ``` ### Defining Custom Elements After importing the theme, you'll need to import the JavaScript files for Shoelace. However, this is a bit tricky to do in NextJS thanks to the SSR environment not having any of the required browser APIs to define endpoints. We'll want to create a component that uses [React's `useLayoutEffect`](https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-reference.html#uselayouteffect) to add in the custom components before the first render: ```javascript function CustomEls({ URL }) { // useRef to avoid re-renders const customEls = useRef(false); useLayoutEffect(() => { if (customEls.current) { return; } import('@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/utilities/base-path').then(({ setBasePath }) => { setBasePath(`${URL}/static/static`); // This imports all components import('@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/react'); // If you're wanting to selectively import components, replace this line with your own definitions // import("@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/components/button/button"); customEls.current = true; }); }, [URL, customEls]); return null; } ``` :::tip If we use `useEffect` instead of `useLayoutEffect`, the initial render will occur with the expected `sl-` props applied, but the subsequent render (caused by the `useEffect`) will remove those props as the custom components initialize. We _must_ use `useLayoutEffect` to have expected behavior ::: :::tip This will import all Shoelace components for convenience. To selectively import components, refer to the [Using webpack](/getting-started/installation#using-webpack) section of the docs. ::: You may be wondering where the `URL` property is coming from. We'll address that in the next few sections. ### Using Our New Component In Code While we need to use `useLayoutEffect` for the initial render, NextJS will throw a warning at us for trying to use `useLayoutEffect` in SSR, which is disallowed. To fix this problem, we'll conditionally render the `CustomEls` component to only render in the browser ```javascript function MyApp({ Component, pageProps, URL }) { const isBrowser = typeof window !== 'undefined'; return ( <> {isBrowser && } ); } ``` ### Environmental Variable However, to make `setBasePath()` work as-expected, we need to know where the file is hosted. To do this, we need to set [environmental variables](https://nextjs.org/docs/basic-features/environment-variables). Create a `.local.env` file and put the following inside: ``` BASE_URL="localhost:3000" ``` Then, modify your `MyApp` class in `_app.js` to pass this process environment into your render: ```javascript MyApp.getInitialProps = async context => { const URL = process.env.BASE_URL; return { URL }; }; ``` :::tip You'll need to set this `BASE_URL` variable inside the build process of whatever local build or CI/CD you have. This will need to be an absolute URL, as a relative URL will cause shoelace to throw a warning ::: ### webpack Config Next we need to add Shoelace's assets to the final build output. To do this, modify `next.config.js` to look like this. ```javascript import { dirname, resolve } from 'path'; import { fileURLToPath } from 'url'; import CopyPlugin from 'copy-webpack-plugin'; import withPlugins from 'next-compose-plugins'; import withTM from 'next-transpile-modules'; const withTMCompiled = withTM(['@shoelace-style/shoelace']); const __dirname = dirname(fileURLToPath(import.meta.url)); export default withPlugins([withTMCompiled], { // This is required for ESM to work properly with Shoelace experimental: { esmExternals: 'loose' }, webpack: config => { config.plugins.push( new CopyPlugin({ patterns: [ { from: resolve(__dirname, 'node_modules/@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/assets/icons'), to: resolve(__dirname, 'static/icons') } ] }) ); return config; } }); ``` :::tip This will copy the files from `node_modules` into your `static` folder on every development serve or build. You may want to avoid committing these into your repo. To do so, simply add `static/assets` into your `.gitignore` folder ::: ## Additional Resources - There is a third-party [example repo](https://github.com/crutchcorn/nextjs-shoelace-example), courtesy of [crutchcorn](https://github.com/crutchcorn), available to help you get started.