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Version: 2.2

Quickstart React

Introduction

This tutorial shows you how to create a basic React dapp and use the Moralis SDK to display on-chain balances. You'll create a balances page and an Express.js API endpoint returning native and ERC20 balances.

The Steps We Will Take

  1. Create a React app
  2. Set up the Moralis SDK on the server
  3. Integrate your app with Moralis
  4. Read any blockchain data from any blockchain

Prerequisites

  1. Follow the Your First Dapp for Node.js tutorial

Create a React Dapp

We will follow the instructions here for setting up a React project.

  1. Create a React project:
npx create-react-app your-first-dapp-react
cd your-first-dapp-react
  1. Install the required dependencies:
  • react-router-dom - for setting up a route/page at /balances
  • axios - to make requests to our server
npm install react-router-dom axios

We will set up the routing for our /balances page which we will set up later.

  1. Open src/App.js and add:
import { createBrowserRouter, RouterProvider } from "react-router-dom";

import Balances from "./balances";

const router = createBrowserRouter([
{
path: "/balances",
element: <Balances />,
},
]);

function App() {
return <RouterProvider router={router} />;
}

export default App;

We will now create our balances component which will make a request to our balances API (to be set up later), store the results in state (useState), and display it.

  1. Inside /src, create a file called balances.jsx. Open it and add:
import { useEffect, useState } from 'react';

import axios from 'axios';

export default function Balances() {
const [balances, setBalances] = useState({});

useEffect(() => {
axios('http://localhost:4000/balances').then(({ data }) => {
setBalances(data);
});
}, []);

return (
<div>
<h3>Wallet: {balances.address}</h3>
<h3>Native Balance: {balances.nativeBalance} ETH</h3>
<h3>Token Balances: {balances.tokenBalances}</h3>
</div>
);
}

Set up the Server

Follow this tutorial for setting up your server. We will need a server to use the Moralis API without needing to expose our API key on the client side. We will also change the port number as our React app is already using 3000.

  1. Install cors:
npm install cors
  1. Replace the contents of index.js with the following (make sure to add your own API key):
const Moralis = require("moralis").default;

const express = require("express");
const cors = require("cors");

const { EvmChain } = require("@moralisweb3/common-evm-utils");

const app = express();
const port = 4000;

// allow access to React app domain
app.use(
cors({
origin: "http://localhost:3000",
credentials: true,
})
);

const MORALIS_API_KEY = "replace_me";
const address = "0xbc4ca0eda7647a8ab7c2061c2e118a18a936f13d";

app.get("/balances", async (req, res) => {
try {
// Promise.all() for receiving data async from two endpoints
const [nativeBalance, tokenBalances] = await Promise.all([
Moralis.EvmApi.balance.getNativeBalance({
chain: EvmChain.ETHEREUM,
address,
}),
Moralis.EvmApi.token.getWalletTokenBalances({
chain: EvmChain.ETHEREUM,
address,
}),
]);
res.status(200).json({
// formatting the output
address,
nativeBalance: nativeBalance.result.balance.ether,
tokenBalances: tokenBalances.result.map((token) => token.display()),
});
} catch (error) {
// Handle errors
console.error(error);
res.status(500);
res.json({ error: error.message });
}
});

const startServer = async () => {
await Moralis.start({
apiKey: MORALIS_API_KEY,
});

app.listen(port, () => {
console.log(`Example app listening on port ${port}`);
});
};

startServer();
  1. Run this command to start the server:
npm run start
  1. Run npm run start in your React project, and visit the http://localhost:3000/balances page to see the results: