useConnectedUser
Defined in: account-kit/react/src/hooks/useConnectedUser.ts:48
A React hook that returns the currently connected user across external wallets (EVM or Solana) or the smart account user from the client store. It prioritizes the EVM wallet connection, then Solana, and finally the smart account user.
Useful for building UI that needs a single “connected user” concept regardless of whether a smart account session exists.
- If an EVM wallet is connected, returns
{ address, type: "eoa", orgId?, userId? }. - If a Solana wallet is connected, returns
{ solanaAddress, type: "eoa", orgId?, userId? }andaddressmay be undefined.orgIdanduserIdmay also be undefined. - Otherwise, returns the smart account user from the store with
type: "sca", ornullif no user exists.
Example
import { import useConnectedUseruseConnectedUser } from "@account-kit/react";
const const user: anyuser = import useConnectedUseruseConnectedUser();
if (const user: anyuser?.anytype === "eoa") {
// EVM wallets expose `address`; Solana wallets expose `solanaAddress`.
var console: ConsoleThe console module provides a simple debugging console that is similar to the JavaScript console mechanism provided by web browsers.
The module exports two specific components:
- A
Console class with methods such as console.log(), console.error() and console.warn() that can be used to write to any Node.js stream. * A global console instance configured to write to process.stdout and process.stderr. The global console can be used without importing the node:console module.
Warning: The global console object's methods are neither consistently synchronous like the browser APIs they resemble, nor are they consistently asynchronous like all other Node.js streams. See the note on process I/O for more information.
Example using the global console:
const name = 'Will Robinson'; console.warn(`Danger $name! Danger!`); // Prints: Danger Will Robinson! Danger!, to stderr ```
Example using the `Console` class:
```js const out = getStreamSomehow(); const err = getStreamSomehow(); const myConsole = new console.Console(out, err);
myConsole.log('hello world'); // Prints: hello world, to out myConsole.log('hello %s', 'world'); // Prints: hello world, to out myConsole.error(new Error('Whoops, something bad happened')); // Prints: [Error: Whoops, something bad happened], to err
const name = 'Will Robinson'; myConsole.warn(`Danger $name! Danger!`); // Prints: Danger Will Robinson! Danger!, to err ```
console.Console.log(message?: any, ...optionalParams: any[]): void (+1 overload)Prints to stdout with newline. Multiple arguments can be passed, with the first used as the primary message and all additional used as substitution values similar to printf(3) (the arguments are all passed to util.format()).
js const count = 5; console.log('count: %d', count); // Prints: count: 5, to stdout console.log('count:', count); // Prints: count: 5, to stdout
See util.format() for more information.
log("Connected EOA:", const user: anyuser.anyaddress ?? const user: anyuser.anysolanaAddress);
}Returns
The connected user, or null if no user is available. ref