# Electron FAQ ## Why am I having trouble installing Electron? When running `npm install electron`, some users occasionally encounter installation errors. In almost all cases, these errors are the result of network problems and not actual issues with the `electron` npm package. Errors like `ELIFECYCLE`, `EAI_AGAIN`, `ECONNRESET`, and `ETIMEDOUT` are all indications of such network problems. The best resolution is to try switching networks, or wait a bit and try installing again. You can also attempt to download Electron directly from [electron/electron/releases](https://github.com/electron/electron/releases) if installing via `npm` is failing. ## When will Electron upgrade to latest Chrome? The Chrome version of Electron is usually bumped within one or two weeks after a new stable Chrome version gets released. This estimate is not guaranteed and depends on the amount of work involved with upgrading. Only the stable channel of Chrome is used. If an important fix is in beta or dev channel, we will back-port it. For more information, please see the [security introduction](tutorial/security.md). ## When will Electron upgrade to latest Node.js? When a new version of Node.js gets released, we usually wait for about a month before upgrading the one in Electron. So we can avoid getting affected by bugs introduced in new Node.js versions, which happens very often. New features of Node.js are usually brought by V8 upgrades, since Electron is using the V8 shipped by Chrome browser, the shiny new JavaScript feature of a new Node.js version is usually already in Electron. ## How to share data between web pages? To share data between web pages (the renderer processes) the simplest way is to use HTML5 APIs which are already available in browsers. Good candidates are [Storage API][storage], [`localStorage`][local-storage], [`sessionStorage`][session-storage], and [IndexedDB][indexed-db]. Or you can use the IPC system, which is specific to Electron, to store objects in the main process as a global variable, and then to access them from the renderers through the `remote` property of `electron` module: ```javascript // In the main process. global.sharedObject = { someProperty: 'default value' } ``` ```javascript // In page 1. require('electron').remote.getGlobal('sharedObject').someProperty = 'new value' ``` ```javascript // In page 2. console.log(require('electron').remote.getGlobal('sharedObject').someProperty) ``` ## My app's window/tray disappeared after a few minutes. This happens when the variable which is used to store the window/tray gets garbage collected. If you encounter this problem, the following articles may prove helpful: * [Memory Management][memory-management] * [Variable Scope][variable-scope] If you want a quick fix, you can make the variables global by changing your code from this: ```javascript const { app, Tray } = require('electron') app.on('ready', () => { const tray = new Tray('/path/to/icon.png') tray.setTitle('hello world') }) ``` to this: ```javascript const { app, Tray } = require('electron') let tray = null app.on('ready', () => { tray = new Tray('/path/to/icon.png') tray.setTitle('hello world') }) ``` ## I can not use jQuery/RequireJS/Meteor/AngularJS in Electron. Due to the Node.js integration of Electron, there are some extra symbols inserted into the DOM like `module`, `exports`, `require`. This causes problems for some libraries since they want to insert the symbols with the same names. To solve this, you can turn off node integration in Electron: ```javascript // In the main process. const { BrowserWindow } = require('electron') let win = new BrowserWindow({ webPreferences: { nodeIntegration: false } }) win.show() ``` But if you want to keep the abilities of using Node.js and Electron APIs, you have to rename the symbols in the page before including other libraries: ```html ``` ## `require('electron').xxx` is undefined. When using Electron's built-in module you might encounter an error like this: ```sh > require('electron').webFrame.setZoomFactor(1.0) Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'setZoomLevel' of undefined ``` This is because you have the [npm `electron` module][electron-module] installed either locally or globally, which overrides Electron's built-in module. To verify whether you are using the correct built-in module, you can print the path of the `electron` module: ```javascript console.log(require.resolve('electron')) ``` and then check if it is in the following form: ```sh "/path/to/Electron.app/Contents/Resources/atom.asar/renderer/api/lib/exports/electron.js" ``` If it is something like `node_modules/electron/index.js`, then you have to either remove the npm `electron` module, or rename it. ```sh npm uninstall electron npm uninstall -g electron ``` However if you are using the built-in module but still getting this error, it is very likely you are using the module in the wrong process. For example `electron.app` can only be used in the main process, while `electron.webFrame` is only available in renderer processes. [memory-management]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Memory_Management [variable-scope]: https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/bzt2dkta(v=vs.94).aspx [electron-module]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/electron [storage]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Storage [local-storage]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/localStorage [session-storage]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/sessionStorage [indexed-db]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/IndexedDB_API