| name | cometchat-core |
| description | Shared rules for CometChat React UI Kit v6. Always loaded alongside framework + placement skills. Read this first. |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | Node.js >=18; React >=18; @cometchat/chat-uikit-react ^6; @cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript ^4 |
| metadata | {"author":"CometChat","version":"3.0.0","tags":"chat cometchat react core rules initialization patterns"} |
Ground truth: the installed @cometchat/chat-uikit-react@^6 + @cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript@^4 package types (node_modules/@cometchat/chat-uikit-react) + docs/ui-kit/react. Official docs: https://www.cometchat.com/docs/ui-kit/react/overview · Docs MCP: claude mcp add --transport http cometchat-docs https://www.cometchat.com/docs/mcp (or fetch the URL directly on agents without MCP). Verify any non-obvious symbol against the installed package types before relying on it.
Purpose
This is the foundational skill for every CometChat React UI Kit v6 integration. It teaches Claude HOW CometChat works -- initialization, login, CSS, environment variables, SSR safety, and the provider pattern -- so Claude can write project-appropriate code instead of relying on templates.
Read this skill first, before any framework or placement skill.
When to use
- Any React-family integration: Vite + React, Next.js (App or Pages Router), React Router v6/v7, Astro with React islands.
- BEFORE loading any framework-specific patterns skill (
cometchat-react-patterns, cometchat-nextjs-patterns, etc.) — those layer on top of this.
- When the user is asking about CometChat init, login, env vars, CSS, provider pattern, SSR safety, or production auth.
When NOT to use
- React Native (Expo or bare) — load
cometchat-native-core instead. The wrappers, env-var prefixes, and lifecycle are different.
- Angular — load
cometchat-angular-core. Uses APP_INITIALIZER + CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA + environment.ts, not React's provider chain.
- Native Android (V5 or V6) — load
cometchat-android-v5-core or cometchat-android-v6-core. Kotlin init, local.properties credentials.
- Native iOS (V5) — load
cometchat-ios-core. Swift init, CocoaPods/SPM.
- Flutter (V5 or V6) — load
cometchat-flutter-v5-core or cometchat-flutter-v6-core. Dart init via pubspec.yaml.
- Backend-only token-mint server work — load
cometchat-production for the REST-API token recipes; this skill is client-side.
Common Rationalizations — and why they're wrong
A two-column anti-skip defense. Every excuse below has been used by agents (or could plausibly be) to skip rules in this skill. The rebuttal cites the validated incident.
| Excuse the agent might invent | Reality |
|---|
| "StrictMode double-invocation is a dev-only quirk, so I can skip the in-flight login promise pattern (§2)" | The same race fires anywhere a parent component re-mounts (React Router v6 nested routes, Suspense boundary retries, error-boundary resets). Skipping yields the canonical "Please wait until the previous login request ends" error on production refreshes too. |
"This is a quick prototype, I'll hardcode cometchat-uid-1 instead of asking the user" | Two testers shipped apps where the default UID was a Bot in their dashboard (ENG-35717). Auth-key login refuses bot users by design; the error Auth token creation not allowed for this bot <uid> is opaque. Always ask via the dispatcher's Step 3d.1 prompt. |
"I'll use setError(String(e)) for now and pretty-print later" | String(e) on a CometChatException renders [object Object] — testers wasted 10-minute debugging sessions on this (ENG-35719). Always emit the §6 formatCometChatError helper from cometchat/errors.ts. "Later" never comes. |
"The env file looks right, I don't need to run config show --json" | Two testers shipped code with empty VITE_COMETCHAT_APP_ID because the dispatcher moved on without confirming (ENG-35718). The pre-flight is 1 second; the cost of skipping is a customer-facing init failure. |
| "I know React, I can skip reading the framework-specific patterns skill" | The framework patterns carry version-pinned traps that aren't in training data: the Next.js 15+ rule dynamic(ssr:false) must live in a Client Component (verified by runtime smoke 2026-06-02), the Vite Visual Builder tsconfig patches (resolveJsonModule, jsx: react-jsx, verbatimModuleSyntax: false), the React Router v7 appDirectory constraint. Skipping = customer-visible build failure. |
| "I'll add the telemetry hook later; the basic provider works without it" | The telemetry prop is opt-in by design (no-op if not passed) — but the four lifecycle events (init_started / init_finished / login_started / login_finished + their _failed variants) are how customers wire analytics into onboarding funnels without monkey-patching. Skipping ENG-35715 wiring means the customer has to refactor their provider post-launch. |
Red flags — signs you're misapplying this skill
- The agent emitted
setError(String(e)) anywhere in code — should be setError(formatCometChatError(e)) per §6 (ENG-35719).
- The agent's plan (Step 3f) doesn't include
cometchat/errors.ts as a created file.
- The agent emitted bare
CometChatUIKit.login(uid) without the in-flight-promise guard (ensureLoggedIn) — guaranteed StrictMode race in dev.
- A
<style> or CSS rule targets internal class names like .cometchat-conversation-list-item (anti-pattern §8.3) instead of the --cometchat-* CSS variables.
- The agent picked
cometchat-uid-1 without asking the user (ENG-35717 — the bot-flag failure mode).
- The agent's env file uses the wrong framework prefix (e.g.,
VITE_* in a Next.js project, or EXPO_PUBLIC_* in a Vite project).
- The provider doesn't gate
{children} on isReady — chat components mount before init completes and throw CometChat is not initialized errors.
Verification — before declaring this skill applied
Run through this checklist before saying "done" for any task that touched cometchat-core territory:
1. Initialization
CometChat must be initialized exactly once before any UI component renders. Initialization is asynchronous and must complete fully before mounting any CometChat* component.
File-based init with cometchat-settings.json (recommended)
Version requirement (ENG-35866 — Skills Telemetry). CometChatUIKit.initFromSettings(settings) reads a cometchat-settings.json object and lets the SDK self-report integrationSource = "ai-agent" to /user_sessions. It ships GA in @cometchat/chat-uikit-react >= 6.5.2 + @cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript >= 4.1.11 (npm latest). On an older UI Kit the method does not exist — use the UIKitSettingsBuilder fallback below.
Step 1 — create cometchat-settings.json at the project root. Fill appId / region / credentials.authKey from the CLI provision setup output; leave everything else at the defaults below. This is the single source of credentials — no second copy to keep in sync.
{
"appId": "APP_ID_HERE",
"region": "us",
"credentials": {
"authKey": "AUTH_KEY_HERE"
},
"chatSDK": {
"presenceSubscription": {
"type": "ALL_USERS",
"roles": []
},
"autoEstablishSocketConnection": true,
"adminHost": null,
"clientHost": null
},
"callsSDK": {
"host": null,
"adminHost": null,
"clientHost": null,
"callsHost": null
},
"uiKit": {
"subscribePresenceForAllUsers": true
}
}
Step 2 — init by importing the JSON as a build-time module. Vite, CRA, Next.js, and Astro all have resolveJsonModule on by default, so the import is type-safe with no extra config:
import { CometChatUIKit } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
import cometchatSettings from "./cometchat-settings.json";
await CometChatUIKit.initFromSettings(cometchatSettings);
- Do NOT gitignore
cometchat-settings.json. The dev-mode authKey it holds is no more exposed than a VITE_COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY=… env value (both ship in the built bundle); production integrations migrate to server-minted auth tokens regardless.
- The same module-flag /
useEffect / entry-point placement rules in the rest of this section apply unchanged — just swap CometChatUIKit.init(settings) for CometChatUIKit.initFromSettings(cometchatSettings).
The UIKitSettingsBuilder (fallback — UI Kit before file-based init)
import { CometChatUIKit, UIKitSettingsBuilder } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
const settings = new UIKitSettingsBuilder()
.setAppId(APP_ID)
.setRegion(REGION)
.setAuthKey(AUTH_KEY)
.subscribePresenceForAllUsers()
.build();
Init must happen once
Use a module-level flag to prevent double-init. This is critical because React StrictMode in development calls effects twice:
let initialized = false;
async function initCometChat(): Promise<void> {
if (initialized) return;
initialized = true;
if (!APP_ID || !REGION || !AUTH_KEY) {
throw new Error(
"CometChat credentials are empty — check .env and the framework's env prefix " +
"(VITE_ / NEXT_PUBLIC_ / PUBLIC_), and restart the dev server after editing .env.",
);
}
const settings = new UIKitSettingsBuilder()
.setAppId(APP_ID)
.setRegion(REGION)
.setAuthKey(AUTH_KEY)
.subscribePresenceForAllUsers()
.build();
await CometChatUIKit.init(settings);
}
Init must be in useEffect (React components) or before mount (entry files)
In a useEffect (Next.js, Astro, React Router SSR):
useEffect(() => {
initCometChat()
.then(() => loginUser())
.then(() => setReady(true))
.catch((e) => setError(String(e)));
}, []);
At the entry point (Vite/CRA -- no SSR):
CometChatUIKit.init(settings)
?.then(() => CometChatUIKit.login("cometchat-uid-1"))
.then(() => mount())
.catch((e) => mountError(String(e)));
The init-at-entry pattern works for Vite/CRA because main.tsx only runs in the browser. For frameworks with SSR (Next.js, Astro, React Router v7 SSR), you MUST use the useEffect pattern because the module runs on the server first.
2. Login
Development mode
Use CometChatUIKit.login(uid) with a test UID. Every new CometChat app comes with five pre-created test users: cometchat-uid-1 through cometchat-uid-5.
const user = await CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser();
if (!user) {
await CometChatUIKit.login("cometchat-uid-1");
}
⚠️ login() is safe to call sequentially, NOT concurrently
A subtle but important distinction:
- Sequential (first
login() completes, then second is called): the SDK's second call returns immediately with the already-logged-in user. Safe.
- Concurrent (a second
login() fires while the first is still in-flight): the SDK throws "Please wait until the previous login request ends." The user sees a red error on the page, has to refresh, and only then does it work (because the first session is now cached).
This is exactly the case that React 18 StrictMode triggers in development: effects run mount → unmount → mount, so a useEffect that calls login() fires twice with no time for the first call to finish. Production builds don't double-mount, but any code path that can call login() from two places simultaneously hits the same error.
Guard concurrent login with a module-level in-flight promise:
let loginInFlight: Promise<unknown> | null = null;
async function ensureLoggedIn(
uid: string,
authToken?: string,
): Promise<void> {
const existing = await CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser();
if (existing && existing.getUid?.() === uid) return;
if (existing) await CometChatUIKit.logout();
if (loginInFlight) {
await loginInFlight;
return;
}
loginInFlight = authToken
? CometChatUIKit.loginWithAuthToken(authToken)
: CometChatUIKit.login(uid);
try {
await loginInFlight;
} finally {
loginInFlight = null;
}
}
Call ensureLoggedIn() from the provider / effect instead of CometChatUIKit.login() directly. Both StrictMode mounts resolve against the same promise, so only one login request actually hits the server.
Why not just a boolean flag? A boolean would require extra wait-loop code to handle "login started but not finished yet." A cached promise handles that automatically — await on the same promise is free for all callers.
Getting the current logged-in UID in app code
When your integration code needs the current user's UID (for example, to decide which conversation to target, or to filter by sender), always fetch it from the SDK — never hardcode a UID like "cometchat-uid-1".
Two getters, for different contexts. Default to the sync version — it matches the v6 sample app and works for almost all app code, because by the time UI components render, the kit's init + login flow is already complete:
import { CometChatUIKitLoginListener } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
const me = CometChatUIKitLoginListener.getLoggedInUser();
const myUid = me?.getUid();
const me = await CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser();
const myUid = me?.getUid();
The sync CometChatUIKitLoginListener.getLoggedInUser() is the right call from any component that mounts AFTER login completes — which is virtually all of them, since the dispatcher's recipes put login on a dedicated route or in the provider's init effect that gates rendering. Reach for the async CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser() only when you're inside that init effect itself.
Casing matters. Note getLogged**In**User (capital I) on the LoginListener vs getLogged**in**User (lowercase i) on CometChatUIKit — both casings exist in the kit, they're different methods.
Hardcoding "cometchat-uid-1" only works in the dev mode login call (CometChatUIKit.login("cometchat-uid-1")) because you're choosing who to log in as. Once logged in, the getters are the source of truth — useful when the logged-in user comes from production auth (a real user ID, not a test UID), or when the user logs out and logs in as someone else.
Production mode
Use CometChatUIKit.loginWithAuthToken(token) with a token obtained from your backend. The backend generates the token using the CometChat REST API with your AUTH_TOKEN (not the client-side AUTH_KEY).
const response = await fetch("/api/cometchat-token", {
method: "POST",
headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
body: JSON.stringify({ uid: currentUser.id }),
});
const { token } = await response.json();
await CometChatUIKit.loginWithAuthToken(token);
For the full production auth setup, use npx @cometchat/skills-cli production-auth. Never hardcode auth keys in source code that ships to production.
Logout
await CometChatUIKit.logout();
Call this when the user signs out of your application. This clears CometChat's local session.
3. CSS
Import once at the app root
import "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react/css-variables.css";
This import MUST appear exactly once, at the highest level of your application:
| Framework | Where to import |
|---|
| React (Vite) | src/main.tsx or src/index.css via @import |
| Next.js (App Router) | app/globals.css via @import or app/layout.tsx |
| Next.js (Pages Router) | pages/_app.tsx or styles/globals.css |
| Astro | Global layout file or src/styles/global.css |
| React Router | Root route module or app/root.tsx |
Theming with CSS variables
All CometChat components respect --cometchat-* CSS variables. Override them on a parent element or :root:
:root {
--cometchat-primary-color: #6851d6;
--cometchat-background-color-01: #ffffff;
--cometchat-text-color-primary: #141414;
--cometchat-font-family: "Inter", sans-serif;
--cometchat-border-radius-lg: 12px;
}
Never target internal class names
CometChat's internal class names (like .cometchat-message-bubble__wrapper) are not part of the public API and may change between versions. Always use CSS variables for customization. The only exception is when explicitly copying patterns from the v6 sample app that use documented BEM class names.
4. Environment variables
Each framework has its own convention for exposing env vars to client-side code. CometChat needs three variables: APP_ID, REGION, and AUTH_KEY.
Per-framework naming
| Framework | Prefix | Example |
|---|
| React (Vite) | VITE_ | import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_APP_ID |
| Next.js | NEXT_PUBLIC_ | process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_COMETCHAT_APP_ID |
| Astro | PUBLIC_ | import.meta.env.PUBLIC_COMETCHAT_APP_ID |
| React Router (Vite) | VITE_ | import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_APP_ID |
| CRA | REACT_APP_ | process.env.REACT_APP_COMETCHAT_APP_ID |
The three variables
| Variable suffix | Required | Description |
|---|
COMETCHAT_APP_ID | Yes | Your app ID from the CometChat dashboard |
COMETCHAT_REGION | Yes | Region code: "us", "eu", "in", etc. |
COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY | Dev only | Client-side auth key. Replace with auth tokens for production. |
.env file placement
| Framework | File | Gitignored by default |
|---|
| Vite / React Router | .env | No -- add to .gitignore |
| Next.js | .env.local | Yes |
| Astro | .env | No -- add to .gitignore |
| CRA | .env | No -- add to .gitignore |
5. SSR safety
All CometChat UI Kit components are browser-only. They access window, document, and browser APIs during import. Rendering them on the server will crash.
Framework-specific SSR prevention
Next.js (App Router):
Mark the file containing CometChat components with "use client" at the top. Use next/dynamic with ssr: false if the component is imported from a server component:
"use client";
import { CometChatConversations } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
Or from a server component:
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const ChatView = dynamic(() => import("./ChatView"), { ssr: false });
Next.js (Pages Router):
Use next/dynamic with ssr: false:
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const CometChatNoSSR = dynamic(() => import("../components/CometChatNoSSR"), {
ssr: false,
});
Astro:
Use the client:only="react" directive. This prevents the component from rendering during Astro's static build:
---
import ChatPanel from "../components/ChatPanel";
---
<ChatPanel client:only="react" />
React Router v7 (SSR mode):
Use React.lazy() with Suspense in a clientLoader or useEffect guard:
import { lazy, Suspense } from "react";
const ChatView = lazy(() => import("./ChatView"));
export default function ChatRoute() {
const [mounted, setMounted] = useState(false);
useEffect(() => setMounted(true), []);
if (!mounted) return null;
return (
<Suspense fallback={<div>Loading chat...</div>}>
<ChatView />
</Suspense>
);
}
React (Vite / CRA):
No SSR concerns. These are client-only by nature. Import and use directly.
6. Provider pattern
Instead of inlining init/login logic in every component, create a reusable CometChatProvider that handles initialization, login, and ready-state gating. Wrap your chat UI with it.
"use client";
import React, { useEffect, useState, createContext, useContext } from "react";
import { CometChatUIKit, UIKitSettingsBuilder } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
interface CometChatContextValue {
isReady: boolean;
error: string | null;
}
const CometChatContext = createContext<CometChatContextValue>({
isReady: false,
error: null,
});
export const useCometChat = () => useContext(CometChatContext);
let initialized = false;
let loginInFlight: Promise<unknown> | null = null;
async function ensureLoggedIn(
uid: string,
authToken?: string,
): Promise<void> {
const existing = await CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser();
if (existing) return;
if (loginInFlight) {
await loginInFlight;
return;
}
loginInFlight = authToken
? CometChatUIKit.loginWithAuthToken(authToken)
: CometChatUIKit.login(uid);
try {
await loginInFlight;
} finally {
loginInFlight = null;
}
}
export type CometChatTelemetryEvent =
| { phase: "init_started"; appId: string; region: string }
| { phase: "init_finished"; durationMs: number }
| { phase: "init_failed"; error: unknown }
| { phase: "login_started"; uid: string; mode: "authKey" | "authToken" }
| { phase: "login_finished"; durationMs: number }
| { phase: "login_failed"; error: unknown };
interface CometChatProviderProps {
appId: string;
region: string;
authKey?: string;
authToken?: string;
uid?: string;
telemetry?: (event: CometChatTelemetryEvent) => void;
children: React.ReactNode;
}
export function CometChatProvider({
appId,
region,
authKey,
authToken,
uid = "cometchat-uid-1",
telemetry,
children,
}: CometChatProviderProps) {
const [isReady, setIsReady] = useState(false);
const [error, setError] = useState<string | null>(null);
useEffect(() => {
async function setup() {
const initStart = performance.now();
try {
if (!initialized) {
initialized = true;
telemetry?.({ phase: "init_started", appId, region });
const builder = new UIKitSettingsBuilder()
.setAppId(appId)
.setRegion(region)
.subscribePresenceForAllUsers();
if (authKey) {
builder.setAuthKey(authKey);
}
const settings = builder.build();
await CometChatUIKit.init(settings);
telemetry?.({ phase: "init_finished", durationMs: performance.now() - initStart });
}
const loginStart = performance.now();
telemetry?.({ phase: "login_started", uid, mode: authToken ? "authToken" : "authKey" });
await ensureLoggedIn(uid, authToken);
telemetry?.({ phase: "login_finished", durationMs: performance.now() - loginStart });
setIsReady(true);
} catch (e) {
const phase = isReady ? "login_failed" : "init_failed";
telemetry?.({ phase, error: e } as CometChatTelemetryEvent);
setError(formatCometChatError(e));
}
}
setup();
}, [appId, region, authKey, authToken, uid, telemetry]);
if (error) {
return (
<div style={{ color: "red", padding: 16, fontFamily: "monospace" }}>
CometChat Error: {error}
</div>
);
}
if (!isReady) {
return null;
}
return (
<CometChatContext.Provider value={{ isReady, error }}>
{children}
</CometChatContext.Provider>
);
}
Usage
<CometChatProvider
appId={import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_APP_ID}
region={import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_REGION}
authKey={import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY}
telemetry={(event) => {
if (event.phase === "init_finished" || event.phase === "login_finished") {
analytics.track(`cometchat.${event.phase}`, { ms: event.durationMs });
} else if (event.phase === "init_failed" || event.phase === "login_failed") {
analytics.trackError(`cometchat.${event.phase}`, { error: String(event.error) });
} else {
analytics.track(`cometchat.${event.phase}`, event);
}
}}
>
<ChatPage />
</CometChatProvider>
The provider pattern keeps init/login logic in one place. Chat components inside <CometChatProvider> are guaranteed to render only after init and login succeed.
Pretty-print errors — DO NOT String(error) (ENG-35719)
CometChat.CometChatException objects look like { code: "ERROR_API_KEY_NOT_FOUND", message: "Auth Key cannot be empty", details: ..., source: ... } (in some kit versions the fields are errorCode / errorDescription). Calling String(e) on them yields "[object Object]" — the integrator then has to open devtools, copy the error to the console, and JSON.stringify it by hand just to read the message. Testers consistently flag this as the most frustrating moment of the first-run integration.
Emit this helper in cometchat/errors.ts and reuse it from the provider, login screen, and any feature module that catches a kit error:
export function formatCometChatError(e: unknown): string {
if (e == null) return "Unknown CometChat error.";
const err = e as Record<string, unknown>;
const code =
(err.code as string | undefined) ??
(err.errorCode as string | undefined);
const message =
(err.message as string | undefined) ??
(err.errorDescription as string | undefined);
if (code && message) return `[CometChat ${code}] ${message}`;
if (message) return `[CometChat] ${message}`;
try {
return `[CometChat] ${JSON.stringify(e)}`;
} catch {
return `[CometChat] ${String(e)}`;
}
}
const KNOWN_DOC_HINTS: Record<string, string> = {
ERROR_API_KEY_NOT_FOUND:
"Auth Key is missing or invalid. Check your env vars (VITE_COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY / EXPO_PUBLIC_COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY) and confirm the key in Dashboard → App → Credentials.",
ERR_UID_NOT_FOUND:
"The UID you're logging in with doesn't exist in this CometChat app. Create the user in Dashboard → Users, or pick one of the pre-seeded test UIDs (cometchat-uid-1 .. cometchat-uid-5).",
ERR_AUTH_TOKEN_NOT_FOUND:
"Auth token is empty or expired. Re-mint it from your backend via the CometChat REST API.",
AUTH_ERR_BOT:
"This UID is flagged as a Bot in the dashboard — auth-key login is refused for bot users by design. Toggle Bot OFF in Dashboard → Users, or pick a non-bot UID.",
};
export function logCometChatError(e: unknown): void {
const formatted = formatCometChatError(e);
console.error(formatted, e);
const code = (e as { code?: string; errorCode?: string })?.code ??
(e as { code?: string; errorCode?: string })?.errorCode;
if (code && KNOWN_DOC_HINTS[code]) {
console.warn(`[CometChat hint] ${KNOWN_DOC_HINTS[code]}`);
}
}
Then in the provider:
} catch (e) {
logCometChatError(e);
setError(formatCometChatError(e));
}
And in the error renderer:
if (error) {
return (
<div role="alert" style={{ color: "#b91c1c", padding: 16, fontFamily: "ui-monospace, monospace", whiteSpace: "pre-wrap" }}>
<strong>CometChat failed to initialize.</strong>
<div style={{ marginTop: 8 }}>{error}</div>
<div style={{ marginTop: 8, fontSize: 12, opacity: 0.7 }}>
See the browser console for the full error object and any [CometChat hint] line above it.
</div>
</div>
);
}
This three-part recipe — formatCometChatError for the visible message, logCometChatError for the console (with a docs hint for known codes), and a multi-line render that points at the console — turns "ERR_API_KEY_NOT_FOUND" from a 10-minute debugging session into a 10-second fix.
⚠️ Replace setError(String(e)) everywhere. The two earlier examples in this skill (§1 init-in-useEffect, §6 provider's setup() catch) use setError(String(e)) for compactness — when you scaffold the real integration, emit formatCometChatError(e) instead and import it from cometchat/errors.ts. The same applies to RN (cometchat-native-core), Angular (cometchat-angular-core), and the native cores — the helper is platform-agnostic, just adapt the file extension.
7. RTL, i18n, and accessibility
These three concerns share one property: the UI Kit handles them out of the box, but a careless customization can break them. Read this before writing custom views, composer actions, or header replacements.
RTL (right-to-left)
The UI Kit reads dir="rtl" from the document root. If the project already sets <html dir="rtl"> (or toggles it dynamically for Arabic/Hebrew locales), CometChat components flip automatically — message bubbles mirror, avatars swap sides, icons rotate where appropriate. No CometChat-specific config needed.
To test: add <html dir="rtl"> to index.html (or set it via JS in Next.js App Router: <html dir="rtl"> in app/layout.tsx). Reload — the conversation list avatar + text should render on the right, message bubbles mirror, the composer input aligns right.
When customizing: if you replace a default view (e.g. a custom message bubble), test it in both LTR and RTL. The UI Kit's components use logical properties (margin-inline-start, padding-inline-end) — your custom components should too, or they'll break RTL.
i18n (translations)
The UI Kit has a built-in CometChatLocalize utility that covers ~40 languages out of the box. Initialize it once, alongside CometChatUIKit.init():
import { CometChatLocalize } from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
CometChatLocalize.init({
language: "es",
});
For a dynamic language switcher, call CometChatLocalize.setCurrentLanguage(newLang) when the user picks a language (NOT setLocale — that method doesn't exist in v6). The UI Kit re-renders with the new strings.
To override a string: there's no nested resources: { en: {...} } option. Use either translationsForLanguage at init (a FLAT key→value map for the chosen language), or the standalone CometChatLocalize.addTranslation({...}):
CometChatLocalize.init({
language: "en",
translationsForLanguage: {
"type a message": "Write your message…",
"start a conversation": "Say hi 👋",
},
});
CometChatLocalize.addTranslation({
"type a message": "Write your message…",
});
Full translation key list lives under node_modules/@cometchat/chat-uikit-react/dist/types/resources/ (types) or the docs MCP. Don't invent keys — unknown keys fall through to the default.
Accessibility
Default components ship with:
aria-label on icon-only buttons (send, attach, call, etc.)
role="listbox" + role="option" on conversation / user / group lists
- Keyboard navigation:
Tab to focus, Enter to activate, Esc to close modals
- Focus management: opening a thread view moves focus to the thread header; closing returns focus to the trigger
Rules when customizing:
- Replacing an icon-only button? Add
aria-label="<verb>" (e.g. aria-label="Send message").
- Replacing a list item? Keep
role="option" + aria-selected on the wrapping element.
- Replacing the composer? Preserve the
<textarea> with an accessible <label> (visible or aria-label), and keep Enter/Shift+Enter behavior.
- Replacing a modal? Trap focus inside the modal while open, restore focus to the trigger on close, and add
role="dialog" + aria-modal="true" + a labelled heading.
- Color contrast: when theming with custom colors, verify text contrast ≥ 4.5:1 against background. A low-saturation primary color on a white background breaks AA contrast.
For deep customization (e.g. a fully custom message bubble), the a11y responsibility shifts to the custom component — the UI Kit only guarantees it for its own defaults. Test with a screen reader (VoiceOver on macOS, NVDA on Windows) and keyboard-only navigation before shipping.
8. Anti-patterns
These are specific things NOT to do. Each one causes real bugs that are hard to debug.
-
Do NOT call CometChatUIKit.init() during render. Init is async and has side effects. Calling it during render causes infinite re-render loops. Always call in useEffect or before createRoot.
-
Do NOT import css-variables.css in multiple files. Duplicate imports cause CSS specificity conflicts and doubled variable declarations. Import it exactly once at the app root.
-
Do NOT render CometChat components before init completes. Components assume the SDK is initialized. Rendering before init finishes causes "CometChat is not initialized" runtime errors. Use the provider pattern or a ready-state gate.
-
Do NOT hardcode AUTH_KEY in source files. The auth key is a secret. Use environment variables during development. Use auth tokens in production.
-
Guard concurrent login() calls with a module-level in-flight promise. login() is only safe to call sequentially. Two login() calls overlapping (e.g. React 18 StrictMode's double effect) throw "Please wait until the previous login request ends." Cache the first login's promise at module scope and await that from subsequent callers. See the ensureLoggedIn helper in section 2 and section 6's provider pattern.
-
Do NOT render CometChat components in a server-side context. All components require browser APIs. In Next.js, always use "use client". In Astro, always use client:only="react".
-
Do NOT target CometChat's internal CSS class names for styling. These are not part of the public API. Use --cometchat-* CSS variables instead. Internal classes change between minor versions.
-
Do NOT create CometChat components without a container that has explicit dimensions. CometChat components fill 100% of their container. If the container has no height, the components collapse to zero height. Always set height, min-height, or use flexbox/grid to give the container dimensions.
-
Do NOT re-initialize CometChat when navigating between routes. Init should happen once at the app level (in the provider or entry file), not per-route. Re-initializing causes flickering and dropped WebSocket connections.
-
Do NOT invent component names. CometChat exports specific components with specific names. Check the cometchat-components skill before writing any <CometChat*> JSX. Using a wrong name (e.g., <CometChatChat>, <CometChatMessenger>) causes a build error.
-
Do NOT wrap CometChat components in a transformed container. Per the CSS spec, any non-none transform on an element creates a new containing block for position: fixed descendants. CometChat UI Kit renders several overlays as position: fixed (message options menu, emoji picker, file preview, reactions popover, thread panel) and expects them to anchor to the viewport. Wrapping the chat in a container that uses transform: translateX(...) — a common pattern for slide-in drawers / sidebars — reparents those overlays to the drawer, causing them to appear clipped, offset, or drift mid-animation.
This includes Tailwind's translate-x-* utilities — translate-x-full, -translate-x-full, translate-x-0, translate-x-[420px], etc. all compile to transform: translateX(...) and trigger the same bug. Same for -translate-y-*, translate-*, scale-*, rotate-*, skew-*, transform-*, and any transition-transform utility applied to a container wrapping CometChat components. If you see yourself reaching for any Tailwind class in the transform: family on a drawer/sidebar/modal that contains chat UI, stop.
Animate the right / left offset instead, or use margin-right: isOpen ? 0 : -<width>. In Tailwind: toggle between right-0 and a negative right-[-420px] with transition-[right] instead of transition-transform.
Same rule applies to filter, perspective, backdrop-filter, and will-change: transform — any of those also trigger the containing-block takeover. See cometchat-placement's drawer and widget patterns for the correct right-offset animation.
9. Docs MCP (recommended, not required)
The CometChat docs MCP provides runtime access to the latest documentation, including prop types, callback signatures, request builder methods, SDK events, CSS variable names, and error decoders.
Installation
claude mcp add --transport http cometchat-docs https://www.cometchat.com/docs/mcp
For other clients, see: https://www.cometchat.com/docs/mcp-server
When to use
- Looking up a prop's exact type or default value
- Finding callback signatures (e.g., what
onItemClick passes)
- Checking request builder methods (e.g.,
ConversationsRequestBuilder.setLimit)
- Understanding SDK events (e.g.,
CometChatMessageEvents.ccMessageSent)
- Verifying CSS variable names before writing overrides
- Decoding error messages (e.g., "INVALID_AUTH_KEY")
When NOT to use
- For component names and basic props -- use the
cometchat-components skill instead (it works offline)
- For init/login/CSS patterns -- they are in this skill
- For placement patterns -- they are in the
cometchat-placement skill
- For anything the CLI handles -- the CLI templates are the source of truth for those paths
Fallback when not installed
If the docs MCP is not installed and you need information beyond what the component and core skills contain, check the installed TypeScript definitions:
grep -A 80 "interface CometChat<ComponentName>Props" \
node_modules/@cometchat/chat-uikit-react/dist/index.d.ts \
2>/dev/null | head -80
This is faster and more accurate than guessing from training data. Never invent SDK signatures from memory.
10. Package dependencies
Every CometChat React integration requires these two packages:
{
"@cometchat/chat-uikit-react": "^6",
"@cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript": "^4"
}
The UI Kit (@cometchat/chat-uikit-react) provides all the React components. The SDK (@cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript) provides the CometChat namespace with types (CometChat.User, CometChat.Group, CometChat.Conversation, CometChat.BaseMessage) and methods.
Install with your project's package manager:
npm install @cometchat/chat-uikit-react@^6 @cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript@^4
⚠️ Keep the @^6 / @^4 major pins — never run a bare npm install @cometchat/chat-uikit-react. v7 of the React UI Kit is published on npm; a bare (unpinned) install resolves to whatever is tagged latest, so once v7 promotes to latest it will pull v7 — and these skills teach the v6 API, so the integration breaks. The @^6 pin keeps you on the latest v6 (currently 6.5.2) regardless. Bump to @^7 only when you've moved to the v7 skills.
💡 Cost transparency (ENG-35722) — disclose proactively when integrating into a new project: the kit adds roughly 2.8 MB of JS (~860 KB gzipped), ~860 KB of CSS, and ~1.5 MB of Roboto TTF fonts (9 weights bundled). If the customer's app already loads custom fonts, the Roboto bundle is redundant; override via the --cometchat-font-family CSS variable to skip preloading the kit fonts (the TTFs still ship but the browser doesn't download them unless they're actually used). For SaaS founders evaluating CometChat vs self-build, also mention:
- Pricing: https://www.cometchat.com/pricing (free tier covers small dev/test use)
- Data extraction / migration: REST API endpoints
GET /v3/users, GET /v3/groups, GET /v3/messages?conversationId= can export everything; no proprietary lock-in
- Demo without account: for
intent: "evaluating" users, point at the hosted demo at https://app.cometchat.com/login (sign-up gives a free app immediately; ENG-35722 demo-without-account hosted-demo is a vendor follow-up)
SDK types you will use
import { CometChat } from "@cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript";
CometChat.User
CometChat.Group
CometChat.Conversation
CometChat.BaseMessage
CometChat.TextMessage
CometChat.getUser(uid: string): Promise<CometChat.User>
CometChat.getGroup(guid: string): Promise<CometChat.Group>
11. Visual Builder integration
When the dispatcher's Step 3.1 sets customize=visual, skills runs cometchat builder export --platform react — a single CLI command that mirrors the dashboard's Export-button workflow. It downloads the canonical static template ZIP from preview.cometchat.com/downloads/cometchat-builder-react.zip, fetches the per-builder settings JSON via GET /vcb/builders/{id}, unzips the template, splices the fetched JSON (+ missing-field defaults) into CometChatSettings.ts, and writes the result to --output (default: src/CometChat/).
How CometChatSettings.ts is patched (splice, not full-file overwrite): the canonical file declares both export interface CometChatSettingsInterface { ... } and export const CometChatSettings: CometChatSettingsInterface = { ... }. The CLI rewrites only the export const CometChatSettings = {...} object literal with the per-builder JSON, preserving the export interface CometChatSettingsInterface above it (the const is typed against that interface — destroying it breaks the build). The sentinel comment (SKILLS-AUTO-GENERATED — do not edit by hand. Last sync: <ISO>) is prepended to the spliced file. Do not describe this as a full-file replace.
The src/CometChat/ directory contains CometChatApp.tsx, the repo's own CometChatProvider-style context, CometChatHome with tabs (Chats / Calls / Users / Groups), theme hooks (useThemeStyles, useSystemColorScheme), login listener wiring, and 13 supporting components. Skills does NOT hand-roll these — the copied directory is the integration. Two valid render entry points exist: the canonical CRA app's own src/App.tsx composes CometChatHome + CometChatLogin directly (gated on a login listener), while the Next.js entry renders the higher-level <CometChatApp /> wrapper. Both are fine — <CometChatApp /> is the simplest, but don't assume it's the only canonical shape.
This is the same pattern iOS (verbatim MessagesVC.swift), Android v6 (verbatim BuilderSettingsHelper.kt), and Flutter v6 (verbatim chat_builder/ package) use. React just happens to copy a directory of TSX files instead of a single class.
11.1 Run cometchat builder export
After Step 3.1.v step 4 (customer says "Done" + skills caches the builderId in .cometchat/builder.json), run:
cometchat builder export --platform react --json
This produces the full per-builder integration in one shot:
| What | Where |
|---|
| Downloads static template ZIP | https://preview.cometchat.com/downloads/cometchat-builder-react.zip |
| Fetches per-builder settings | GET /vcb/builders/{builderId} via the same Bearer token used elsewhere |
| Applies F3 + F10 missing-field defaults | chatFeatures.inAppSounds + chatFeatures.deeperUserEngagement.mentionAll |
| Unzips template into temp dir | /tmp/cometchat-builder-export-XXXX/extracted/ |
Splices CometChatSettings.ts | Rewrites only the export const CometChatSettings = {...} literal with the per-builder JSON; preserves export interface CometChatSettingsInterface; prepends the sentinel comment ("SKILLS-AUTO-GENERATED — do not edit by hand. Last sync: ") |
Copies to --output | Default src/CometChat/ |
| Reports JSON | { status: "exported", builderId, appId, platform, output, settings_file, builder_name } |
For Next.js App Router, pass --output src/app/CometChat. For React Router v7 framework mode, pass --output app/CometChat. The CLI's F25 case-collision pre-check warns if a lowercase src/cometchat/ exists with In-code-shape files (init.ts / CometChatProvider.tsx).
For resync (Step 7 iteration menu → Re-sync visual builder), re-run the SAME command with --force. This re-downloads the latest canonical template + re-fetches the latest settings + replaces the --output directory entirely. Customer hand-edits inside the CometChat/ directory are lost — matches the "SKILLS-AUTO-GENERATED" contract on the sentinel.
11.2 Files patched (after export)
The builder export command writes the canonical files. Skills then patches the customer's existing project to wire it in:
| Path | Patch |
|---|
package.json | (1) npm install @cometchat/chat-uikit-react@6.4.3 @cometchat/calls-sdk-javascript@4.2.5 — pinned versions from the canonical repo's README. Older/newer versions of chat-uikit-react may drift from the exported src/CometChat/ directory's expected API surface. (2) REQUIRED for Vite — add the cometChatCustomConfig block to package.json. The canonical package.json carries a top-level cometChatCustomConfig block, and the copied context (CometChat/context/CometChatContext.tsx:~216) reads pkg?.default?.cometChatCustomConfig.name. ⚠ This IS build-breaking on Vite: the Builder tsconfig requires resolveJsonModule: true (next row), so tsc -b (the project-references build npm run build runs) statically types package.json → TS2339: Property 'cometChatCustomConfig' does not exist when absent. (tsc --noEmit passes and HIDES this — use tsc -b/npm run build for the build proof. Verified 2026-06-14 on a real export build.) Add: "cometChatCustomConfig": { "name": "<your-app-name>", "version": "<your-app-version>", "production": true }. |
Entry file — src/main.tsx (Vite) / src/index.tsx (CRA) / new client component (Next.js) / route file (React Router) / .astro page (Astro) | Init UI Kit + render <CometChatProvider><App /></CometChatProvider>. Pattern below — varies by framework. |
tsconfig.app.json (Vite 7+) or tsconfig.json (CRA / older Vite) | Imports resolve on Vite as-is — the current builder export writes src/CometChat/ with relative imports (../utils/utils, ../context/CometChatContext), NOT the bare CometChat/…-rooted imports older CRA exports used. So you do NOT need vite-tsconfig-paths / baseUrl (verified 2026-06-14: zero from "CometChat/…" in a fresh export; resolves on Vite out of the box). (Historical: pre-2026 CRA exports used baseUrl:"./src" bare imports that needed vite-tsconfig-paths; the current template ships relative.)
You DO still need these stricter-than-CRA tsconfig flags — Vite 7+ template defaults will otherwise fail the build with TS6133 / TS1484: • "resolveJsonModule": true — required (utils/utils.ts imports a JSON locale) • "jsx": "react-jsx" — required • "verbatimModuleSyntax": false — Vite 7+ default is true; canonical code uses mixed value + type imports without the type modifier • "noUnusedLocals": false — Vite 7+ default is true; canonical code has many unused-by-default destructured listener args (e.g. ({ groupOwner, kickedUser, ... })) • "noUnusedParameters": false — same rationale • "erasableSyntaxOnly": false — Vite 7+ template flag; canonical code uses const enums / namespace patterns • "allowJs": true — canonical app's tsconfig sets this; some kit internals may rely on JS fallthrough Validated 2026-05-21 against create-vite@8 + canonical uikit-builder-app (CRA) + @cometchat/chat-uikit-react@6.4.3. |
.env (framework-prefixed) | Already written by Step 2c provision. Skip if present; warn if missing. |
The builder export command handles the JSON patching + sentinel comment automatically. Skills only needs to patch the four files above (package.json, entry file, tsconfig, .env).
11.3 Entry-file init pattern (Vite + React)
import { createRoot } from "react-dom/client";
import "./index.css";
import App from "./App.tsx";
import {
UIKitSettingsBuilder,
CometChatUIKit,
} from "@cometchat/chat-uikit-react";
import { CometChat } from "@cometchat/chat-sdk-javascript";
import { setupLocalization } from "./CometChat/utils/utils.ts";
import { CometChatProvider } from "./CometChat/context/CometChatContext.tsx";
export const COMETCHAT_CONSTANTS = {
APP_ID: import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_APP_ID!,
REGION: import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_REGION!,
AUTH_KEY: import.meta.env.VITE_COMETCHAT_AUTH_KEY!,
};
const uiKitSettings = new UIKitSettingsBuilder()
.setAppId(COMETCHAT_CONSTANTS.APP_ID)
.setRegion(COMETCHAT_CONSTANTS.REGION)
.setAuthKey(COMETCHAT_CONSTANTS.AUTH_KEY)
.subscribePresenceForAllUsers()
.build();
CometChatUIKit.init(uiKitSettings)?.then(() => {
setupLocalization();
createRoot(document.getElementById("root")!).render(
<CometChatProvider>
<App />
</CometChatProvider>
);
});
Then in src/App.tsx:
import CometChatApp from "./CometChat/CometChatApp";
export default function App() {
return (
<div style={{ width: "100vw", height: "100dvh" }}>
<CometChatApp />
</div>
);
}
Critical:
CometChatProvider is the repo's own context from ./CometChat/context/CometChatContext, NOT the kit's CometChatUIKit export. It manages the builder's styleFeatures / chatFeatures state and is required for CometChatHome, useThemeStyles, and the customization toggles to work.
setupLocalization() from ./CometChat/utils/utils is required before render — it wires the builder's i18n catalog into the kit. Skipping it leaves UI strings empty.
CometChatUIKit.init(...) returns a Promise — render only AFTER it resolves. Rendering before init resolves causes CometChatHome to throw on first listener attach.
- Login is handled by
CometChatApp itself (the canonical component uses CometChat.addLoginListener + CometChatUIKit.getLoggedinUser). For dev mode, the customer's App.tsx should call CometChatUIKit.login("cometchat-uid-1") after init resolves but BEFORE rendering — see §2's login order. The canonical app shows a LoginPlaceholder until a user is present.
11.4 Per-framework variants
| Framework | Where to put CometChat/ | Entry-file pattern | SSR notes |
|---|
| Vite + React | src/CometChat/ | src/main.tsx (above) | N/A |
| Create React App | src/CometChat/ | src/index.tsx — same as Vite but use ReactDOM.createRoot from react-dom/client | N/A |
| Next.js App Router | src/app/CometChat/ | Create src/app/CometChatNoSSR/CometChatNoSSR.tsx (client component) that does init + login + renders <CometChatProvider><CometChatApp /></CometChatProvider>. Then create src/app/CometChatAppWrapper.tsx with "use client" + dynamic(() => import("../app/CometChatNoSSR/CometChatNoSSR"), { ssr: false }). Import the wrapper in src/app/page.tsx. | The canonical src/CometChat/ uses window / document / WebSocket APIs at module scope. { ssr: false } on the wrapper is non-negotiable — direct import from a server component causes hydration errors. Use process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_COMETCHAT_* instead of import.meta.env.*. |
| Next.js Pages Router | src/CometChat/ | pages/chat.tsx — const CometChatApp = dynamic(() => import("../src/CometChat/CometChatApp"), { ssr: false }); Init in pages/_app.tsx inside useEffect. | Same SSR rationale as App Router. |
| React Router v7 | app/CometChat/ (framework mode) or src/CometChat/ (data mode) | Framework mode: use a .client.tsx suffix or <ClientOnly> from remix-utils/client-only. Data mode: same as Vite. | Framework mode SSRs by default — .client.tsx suffix OR <ClientOnly> is the only safe pattern. |
| Astro | src/CometChat/ | <CometChatApp client:only="react" /> inside an .astro page. Init runs in a sibling .tsx component that mounts before CometChatApp. | client:only="react" — never client:load (Astro will still SSR the import resolution and crash). |
11.5 Calls + builder
If CometChatSettings.callFeatures has any true value (oneOnOneVoiceCalling, oneOnOneVideoCalling, groupVideoConference, groupVoiceConference):
- The canonical
src/CometChat/ already wires CometChatIncomingCall inside CometChatHome — no extra mount required.
- Skills patches
package.json to add @cometchat/calls-sdk-javascript@4.2.5 (already in the canonical install command above) and the Cloudsmith-hosted @cometchat/calls-lib-webrtc per cometchat-react-calls.
- Calls SDK init runs alongside UI Kit init — pattern in
cometchat-react-calls § 2.
Invoke cometchat-react-calls after this section with { mode: "additive" } so it adds Calls SDK init + lib-webrtc without duplicating the kit-level wiring already present in the copied src/CometChat/.
11.6 Resync flow
The "Re-sync visual builder" iteration menu option (see cometchat/SKILL.md § Step 7) is a one-command re-run:
cometchat builder export --platform react --force
The --force flag is mandatory: it explicitly authorizes replacing the existing src/CometChat/ directory. Without it, the CLI bails with "--output directory `src/CometChat` already exists. Pass --force to replace it (full re-download per the resync flow), or pick a different --output path."
This matches the product contract for step 7 of the UI Kit Builder workflow:
- Re-download the canonical static template ZIP (in case vendor has shipped fixes)
- Re-fetch the customer's current settings JSON (in case they tweaked in browser)
- Apply the F3 + F10 missing-field defaults
- Replace the
src/CometChat/ directory entirely
Customer hand-edits inside src/CometChat/ are lost on resync. This is intentional — the SKILLS-AUTO-GENERATED sentinel comment prepended to CometChatSettings.ts documents the "do not edit by hand" contract. (Note the export itself is a splice — only the export const CometChatSettings = {...} literal is rewritten and export interface CometChatSettingsInterface is preserved — but on --force resync the whole src/CometChat/ directory is re-downloaded and replaced, so any in-folder hand-edits are discarded regardless.)
If a customer needs to override beyond what the Visual Builder exposes, the supported escape hatches are:
- Edit the entry file (e.g.,
src/main.tsx) — outside src/CometChat/, never touched by resync
- Edit
src/App.tsx to wrap <CometChatApp /> with additional providers / styling
- Use
cometchat apply-feature <id> for extension toggles (server-side, survives resync)
- For one-off CSS overrides, edit
src/index.css or equivalent — also outside src/CometChat/
Builder feature toggles vs. dashboard extensions — two independent layers. The Visual Builder's chatFeatures toggles (baked into CometChatSettings.ts) only control whether a feature's UI is shown. Extension- and AI-backed features (polls, message translation, collaborative document/whiteboard, stickers, smart replies, conversation starter/summary) need their server-side capability enabled separately — the dashboard extensions store, which cometchat apply-feature <id> writes and the builder export never touches. So: (a) apply-feature'd extensions always survive builder export --force; (b) turning a feature ON in the builder shows its UI but it fails at runtime until the matching extension is enabled — that's why builder export reports a dashboardSetupNeeded list (the dispatcher runs apply-feature for each). The two flows are complementary: the builder draws the UI, apply-feature turns on the capability behind it.
The cometchat-core §11.7 "Override hook pattern" documents the recommended places to override without touching the canonical.
verify --builder runs after resync to confirm the new export is structurally sound.
11.7 What this section does NOT emit
The canonical src/CometChat/ honors every Builder setting it supports — theme colors, typography, dark/light, sidebar toggle, layout tabs, chatFeatures.*, callFeatures.*, agent.* (per the repo's CometChatHome + styleConfig.ts). The only setting that isn't auto-applied is noCode.docked (the floating-widget shape) — that's a runtime DOM injection that requires the customer to mount <CometChatApp /> inside a docked overlay container. Surface this in the post-emit summary:
Builder settings honored: theme, typography, layout/tabs, sidebar, chat features (mentions/reactions/threads/media/etc.), call features, agent UI.
Builder settings deferred: noCode.docked floating-widget mode — requires manual mount inside a positioned overlay; see cometchat-placement § Floating widget.