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@dash-ui/jest

v2.1.2

Published

Jest utilities for dash-ui

Downloads

37

Readme

Dash snapshots

The easiest way to test React, Preact, and Preact X components with dash-ui is using the snapshot serializer. You can register the serializer via the snapshotSerializers configuration property in your jest configuration like so:

// jest.config.js
module.exports = {
  // ... other config
  snapshotSerializers: ['@dash-ui/jest'],
}

Or you can customize the serializer via the createSerializer method like so: (the example below is with react-test-renderer but @dash-ui/jest also works with enzyme and react-testing-library)

import React from 'react'
import renderer from 'react-test-renderer'
import {styles} from '@dash-ui/styles'
import serializer from '@dash-ui/jest'

expect.addSnapshotSerializer(serializer)

test('renders with correct styles', () => {
  const text = styles({
    heading: `
      font-size: 4rem;
    `,
  })

  const tree = renderer
    .create(<h1 className={text('heading')}>Hello world</h1>)
    .toJSON()

  expect(tree).toMatchSnapshot()
})

Options

classNameReplacer

@dash-ui/jest's snapshot serializer replaces the hashes in class names with an index so that things like whitespace changes won't break snapshots. It optionally accepts a custom class name replacer, it defaults to the below.

const classNameReplacer = (className, index) => `ui-${index}`
import {createSerializer} from '@dash-ui/jest'

expect.addSnapshotSerializer(
  createSerializer({
    classNameReplacer(className, index) {
      return `my-new-class-name-${index}`
    },
  })
)

DOMElements

@dash-ui/jest's snapshot serializer inserts styles and replaces class names in both React and DOM elements. If you would like to disable this behavior for DOM elements, you can do so by passing { DOMElements: false }. For example:

import {createSerializer} from '@dash-ui/jest'

// configures @dash-ui/jest to ignore DOM elements
expect.addSnapshotSerializer(createSerializer({DOMElements: false}))

Custom assertions

toHaveStyleRule

To make more explicit assertions when testing your components you can use the toHaveStyleRule matcher.

import React from 'react'
import renderer from 'react-test-renderer'
import {matchers} from '@dash-ui/jest'

// Add the custom matchers provided by '@dash-ui/jest'
expect.extend(matchers)

test('renders with correct styles', () => {
  const text = styles({
    heading: `
      font-size: 4rem;
    `,
  })

  const tree = renderer
    .create(<h1 className={text('heading')}>Hello world</h1>)
    .toJSON()

  expect(tree).toHaveStyleRule('font-size', '4rem')
  expect(tree).not.toHaveStyleRule('color', 'hotpink')
})

Credit

This was inspired by and relies almost entirely on work by jest-emotion which was largely inspired by jest-glamor-react.

LICENSE

MIT