The question was originally closed because it was a dump of a stack trace with no code.
It was then edited by the asker to include a link to a GitHub repo, one arbitrary file from said repo, and the comment "I think the problem is contained in it..."
That edit bumped it into the Review queue, where the question was voted to remain closed. Then 3 users (one of who reviewed this question in the queue and voted to reopen it) apparently came across it and voted to reopen it.
To me, this question is a "gimme teh codez" question - except instead of requesting us to write code for the asker, it's requesting that we do their debugging for them. In my eyes, such questions should be closed (and remain closed) whenever they're encountered, because they are zero effort; they are extremely specific, therefore unlikely to offer value to any future users; do not have all details encapsulated in the question; and/or show lack of basic understanding.
Therefore, were the people who voted to reopen this question right or wrong?
(FWIW, the same asker then re-posted the exact same question: react - warning appears caliming "Received `true` for a non-boolean attribute `inline`")
inline
there is used as a boolean attribute. It's not clear to me what purpose it serves or why it was added there, so it might be closed as a typo or unclear, but I'll leave that judgement for someone with domain knowledge. That it is a "gimme teh codez" or zero effort question should be irrelevant.