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ngx-speculoos

v12.0.1

Published

Helps writing Angular unit tests

Downloads

13,509

Readme

CircleCI Codecov

ngx-speculoos

ngx-speculoos helps you write simpler, cleaner unit tests for your Angular components, based on the page object pattern. It also provides utilities to make writing Angular unit tests easier.

The library simply wraps the standard Angular ComponentFixture, and you should thus be able to understand and start using ngx-speculoos in just a few minutes if you already know how to write Angular unit tests.

Table of Contents

Quick presentation

Why should you care?

If you've ever written tests like the following:

it('should display French cities when selecting the country France', () => {
  const countrySelect = fixture.nativeElement.querySelector('#country'); // countrySelect is of type any
  countrySelect.selectedIndex = 12; // what is at index 12?
  countrySelect.dispatchEvent(new Event('change')); // why do I need to do that?
  fixture.detectChanges();
  
  const city = fixture.nativeElement.querySelector('#city'); // city is of type any
  expect(city).toBeTruthy();
  expect(city.options.length).toBe(3);
  expect(city.options[0].value).toBe('');
  expect(city.options[0].label).toBe('');
  expect(city.options[1].value).toBe('PARIS');
  expect(city.options[1].label).toBe('Paris');
  expect(city.options[2].value).toBe('LYON');
  expect(city.options[2].label).toBe('Lyon');
});

it('should hide cities when selecting the empty country option', () => {
  const countrySelect = fixture.nativeElement.querySelector('#country'); // I did that previously. What about DRY?
  countrySelect.selectedIndex = 0;
  countrySelect.dispatchEvent(new Event('change')); // why do I need to do that?
  fixture.detectChanges(); // why do I need to do that?
  
  expect(fixture.nativeElement.querySelector('#city')).toBeFalsy(); // I did that previously. What about DRY?
});

ngx-speculoos allows writing the above tests in a simpler, cleaner way:

  • by using the page object pattern (which is optional, but recommended), you avoid repetitions.
  • by using wrappers around elements, dispatching events and triggering change detection is automatic.
  • by using wrappers around elements, you get useful additional methods to make tests easier to write and read.
  • by using custom matchers, you get even simpler expectations and more readable error messages
  • in any case you need them, you always have access to the fixture, the native elements, the debug elements, etc.
class MyComponentTester extends ComponentTester<MyComponent> {
  constructor() {
    super(MyComponent);
  }
  
  get country() {
    return this.select('#country'); // returns a TestSelect object, not any. Similar methods exist for inputs, buttons, etc.
  }
  
  get city() {
    return this.select('#city'); // returns a TestSelect object, not any
  }
}

[...]

it('should display French cities when selecting the country France', () => {
  tester.country.selectLabel('France'); // no dispatchEvent, no detectChanges needed
  
  expect(tester.city.optionValues).toEqual(['', 'PARIS', 'LYON']);
  expect(tester.city.optionLabels).toEqual(['', 'Paris', 'Lyon']);
});

it('should hide cities when selecting empty country option', () => {
  tester.country.selectIndex(0); // no repetition of the selector, no dispatchEvent, no detectChanges needed
  
  expect(tester.city).toBeFalsy(); // no repetition of the selector
});

Installation

Using the CLI: ng add ngx-speculoos

Using npm: npm install --save-dev ngx-speculoos

Using yarn: yarn add --dev ngx-speculoos

Getting started

  • import ComponentTester, and other needed classes from ngx-speculoos
  • Create a MyComponentTester class (in your my-component.spec.ts file, typically) extending ComponentTester<MyComponent>, as shown above.
  • Expose getters (or methods, if you prefer) returning the elements used in your tests, using one of the ComponentTester methods (element, elements, input, select, textarea, button, etc.). See the API documentation for details
  • Write your tests, as shown above, benefiting from the additional methods on the TestXxx classes.
  • If needed, you can always get the fixture, componentInstance, debugElement, nativeElement, etc. from the ComponentTester, and the nativeElement from each TestXxx wrapper.
  • If you like our custom matchers, add them in a beforeEach block as shown above, and enjoy. You can also add them for all tests at once by adding the beforeEach block to the CLI-generated test.ts file.

Features in details

ComponentTester

This is the entry point for most of the functionalities of ngx-speculoos. It wraps a ComponentFixture. You can simply create one in your tests using

const tester = new ComponentTester(MyComponent);

and then use it to query for sub elements, components, directives, etc. But we recommend adopting the page object pattern, in order to make your test easier to write and read, and to avoid repeating the same selectors over and over again.

You do that by writing a class that extends ComponentTester, and provides getters (or functions) to query for elements, components, etc.

class MyComponentTester extends ComponentTester<MyComponent> {
  constructor() {
    super(MyComponent);
  }
  
  get country() {
    return this.select('#country'); // returns a TestSelect object, not any. Similar methods exist for inputs, buttons, etc.
  }
  
  get city() {
    return this.select('#city'); // returns a TestSelect object, not any
  }
}

and then in your tests, or in your beforeEach, once you've configured the testing module, you create an instance of your component tester.

describe('My component', () => {
  let tester: MyComponentTester;
  
  beforeEach(() => {
    TestBed.configureTestingModule({
      declarations: [MyComponent],
      ...
    });
    
    tester = new MyComponentTester();
    tester.detectChanges();
  });
  
  it('should ...', () => {
    
  });

Queries

Queries for elements

Most of the queries that ngx-speculoos supports are used to query for DOM elements. The queries, however, don't actually returns native DOM elements, but wrappers around them, which are instances of TestElement.

TestElement has more specialized subclasses: TestHtmlElement, TestInput, TestSelect, TestTextarea, TestButton. Those subclasses offer helpful methods to get information or dispatch events to HTML elements, inputs, selects, etc. Our custom matchers act on those TestElement objects.

You can create your own subclasses of TestElement and query for them, too.

A TestElement is a wrapper around an Angular DebugElement. So it can access the DebugElement and the native DOM element that it wraps. It also has an instance of the ComponentTester which created it, which itself wraps the Angular ComponentFixture and thus allows detecting changes automatically after an element has been dispatched, for example.

CSS and Type selectors

The first kind of query uses CSS selectors. This is simply a wrapper around Angular's DebugElement.query(By.css()). The second kind of query uses directive types. This is simply a wrapper around Angular's DebugElement.query(By.directive()).

Whatever the kind of selector you choose, the methods are the same though:

  • element(selector) to get the first element matching the selector
  • elements(selector) to get an array of elements matching the selector

Both of those methods will automatically return a TestInput, or a TestSelect, or any other TestElement subclass that ngx-speculoos provides based on the actual type of element being matched. But if you know in advance what the result of the query is, you can use more-specific methods, or their generic parameter. Passing an HTML element name as selector also automatically returns the right type

  • input(selector) returns a TestInput
  • textarea(selector) returns a TestTextarea
  • select(selector) returns a TestSelect
  • button(selector) returns a TestButton
  • element<HtmlInputElement>(selector) returns a TestInput
  • element<HtmlDivElement>(selector) returns a TestHtmlElement<HtmlDivElement>
  • elements<HtmlButtonElement>(selector) returns an Array<TestButton>
  • element('input') returns a TestInput

Queries for sub components

It's often useful to get the component instance of a sub component, for example to inspect its state, or to make one of its outputs emit something. You can do that using the component and components methods:

get productIcon() {
  return this.component(ProductIconComponent); // returns a ProductIconComponent 
}

get reviewers() {
  return this.components(ReviewerComponent); // returns an Array<ReviewerComponent> 
}

Queries for injection tokens

Querying using element(DatepickerDirective) will return you a TestElement on which the DatepickerDirective has been applied.

If you need to get the Datepicker directive instance itself, then use the token() method (or tokens() to get several of them) which takes a selector (CSS or type) as first argument, and the token as second argument:

get datepicker() {
  return this.token('#birth-date', DatepickerDirective); // returns a DatepickerDirective instance
}

Queries for custom TestElement

We provide TestInput, TestSelect, etc. to easily inspect or interact with inputs and selects in our tests. But what if you want the same kind of test abstraction for your own reusable components or directives, like for example your DatepickerDirective.

You can create your own TestElement subclass for that. This subclass must have a constructor that takes a ComponentTester as first argument, and a DebugElement as second argument.

class TestDatepicker extends TestHtmlElement<HTMLElement> {
  constructor(tester: ComponentTester<unknown>, debugElement: DebugElement) {
    super(tester, debugElement);
  }

  get inputField() {
    return this.input('input');
  }

  setDate(year: number, month: number, day: number) {
    this.inputField.fillWith(`${year}-${month}-${day}`);
  }

  toggleDropdown() {
    this.button('button').click();
  }
}

Once you have created that class, you can use the custom() and customs() methods, using any selector, to get instances of your custom `TestElement``

get birthDate() {
  return this.custom('#birth-date', TestDatepicker);
}
it('should not save if birth date is in the future') {
  // ...
  tester.birthDate.setDate(2200, 1, 1);
  tester.save.click();
  expect(userService.create).not.toHaveBenCalled();
}

Subqueries

A query is made from the root ComponentTester. But TestElement themselves also support queries. So you can query for a parent TestElement, and then use it to perform subqueries:

get cardEditButton() {
  return this.element('.card').button('.edit');
}

get cardReviewerComponent() {
  return this.element('.card').component(ReviewerComponent);
}

Custom Jasmine matchers

We provide custom matchers, that act on TestElement and on its more specific subclasses (TestInput, TestSelect, etc.).

The complete matcher list includes:

  • toHaveClass(className: string)
  • toHaveValue(value: string)
  • toHaveText(textContent: string)
  • toHaveTrimmedText(textContent: string)
  • toContainText(textContent: string)
  • toBeChecked()
  • toHaveSelectedIndex(index: number)
  • toHaveSelectedValue(value: string)
  • toHaveSelectedLabel(label: string)
  • toBeVisible()

These matchers must be installed in each test using them:

beforeEach(() => jasmine.addMatchers(speculoosMatchers));

or in all tests, by adding the above line of code in the test.ts file.

Dispatching events

TestElement provides two methods that allow dispatching events in a simple way.

  • dispatchEvent(event: Event)
  • dispatchEventOfType(type: string)

Going through these methods automatically calls detectChanges() on the ComponentTester after the event has been dispatched, so you don't need to call that yourself.

The TestElement subclasses that we provide have more specific event dispatching methods. For example

  • TestHtmlElement.click()
  • TestInput.fillWith() for text, password, number, etc.
  • TestInput.check() for radios and checkboxes
  • TestInput.uncheck() for checkboxes
  • TestTextarea.fillWith()
  • TestSelect.selectIndex()
  • TestSelect.selectValue()
  • TestSelect.selectLabel()

Creating your own TestElement subclasses is a good way to provide such custom methods to interact with your own reusable components in tests.

Routing helpers

ActivatedRoute stub

The library provides a stub for the ActivatedRoute class that you typically inject in your routed components. It mimics the behavior of the actual ActivatedRoute, by having a snapshot and observables that emit when this snapshot changes. And it also allows simulating navigations by imperatively changing the parameters, query parameters, etc.

import { ActivatedRouteStub } from 'ngx-speculoos';

class RoutingComponentTester extends ComponentTester<RoutingComponent> {
  // ...
}

describe('routing component', () => {
  let route: ActivatedRouteStub;
  let tester: RoutingComponentTester;
  
  beforeEach(() => {
    route = stubRoute({
      params: { categoryId: 'pets' }
    });
    
    TestBed.configureTestingModule({
      declarations: [RoutingComponent],
      providers: [
        { provide: ActivatedRoute, useValue: route }
      ]
    });
    
    tester = new RoutingComponentTester();
    tester.detectChanges();
  });
  
  it('should display all the products of the category', () => {
    // test based on the initial route state
  });

  it('should load other products when the category changes or when the query changes', () => {
    route.setParam('category', 'toys');
    tester.detectChanges();
    // ...

    route.setQueryParams({ 'max-price': '30', target: 'children' });
    tester.detectChanges();
    // ...
  });
});

RoutingTester

An alternative approach to injecting a stub activated route consists in using the Angular RouterTestingHarness. The library helps using it by providing a RoutingTester, which is a ComponentTester wrapping the RouterTestingHarness in addition to wrapping its fixture, and additionally provides helper properties.

Here's an example usage of a component displaying the value of the query parameter 'page' and allowing to navigate to itself with a different value for that query parameter.

class PageComponentTester extends RoutingTester {
  constructor(harness: RouterTestingHarness) {
    super(harness);
  }

  get title() {
    return this.element('h1');
  }

  get link() {
    return this.element('a');
  }
}

describe('RoutingTester', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    TestBed.configureTestingModule({
      providers: [
        provideRouter([
          { path: 'list', component: PageComponent }
        ])
      ]
    });
  });

  it('should display the page of the query params', async () => {
    const tester = new PageComponentTester(await RouterTestingHarness.create('/list?page=42'));

    expect(tester.title).toHaveText('Current page: 42');

    await tester.harness.navigateByUrl('/list?page=54');

    expect(tester.title).toHaveText('Current page: 54');
  });

  it('should navigate to the next page when clicking the link', async () => {
    const tester = new PageComponentTester(await RouterTestingHarness.create('/list?page=42'));

    expect(tester.title).toHaveText('Current page: 42');

    tester.link.click();
    await tester.stable();

    expect(tester.urlTree.queryParamMap.get('page')).toBe('43');
    expect(tester.url).toBe('/list?page=43');
    expect(tester.title).toHaveText('Current page: 43');
  });
});

Mocking helper

Jasmine is quite verbose when creating mock objects in a typesafe way:

const productService = jasmine.createSpyObj<ProductService>('ProductService', ['list', 'get', 'create', 'update']);

Since most of what we mock (usually Angular services) are classes, we can actually do a bit of introspection and create a mock that will automatically mock all the methods declared in the class. That's what our createMock() function does. The above code can thus be reduced to:

const productService = createMock(ProductService);

Testing with a host component

ngx-speculoos doesn't provide any specific support for testing with host components, but we do it a lot, simply by creating a ComponentTester for the host component rather than the component under test:

@Component({
  template: '<app-user [user]="user" (smile)="smiled = true"></app-user>'
})
class HostComponent {
  user: User = {
    id: 'u1',
    name: 'John'
  };

  smiled = false;
}

class HostComponentTester extends ComponentTester<HostComponent> {
  constructor() {
    super(HostComponent);
  }

  get userComponent() {
    return this.component(UserComponent);
  }

  // ...
}

Once you have that, you can access the host component using componentInstance(), the component under test using userComponent(), and any element of the component under test using the usual queries.

Gotchas

When do I need to call detectChanges()?

Any event dispatched through a TestElement automatically calls detectChanges() for you. But you still need to call detectChanges() by yourself in the other cases:

  • to actually initialize your component. Sometimes, you want to configure some mocks before the ngOnInit() method of your component is called. That's why creating a ComponentTester does not automatically call detectChanges(). You need to do it yourself. The first call will cause the component lifecycle to start, just as when using a ComponentFixture directly.
  • to force change detection once you've changed the state of your component without dispatching an event: by changing the state, or emitting an event through a subject, or triggering a navigation from the ActivatedRouteStub

Can I use the TestElement methods to act on the component element itself, rather than a sub-element?

Yes. The ComponentTester has a testElement property, which is the TestHtmlElement wrapping the component's element.

Issues, questions

Please, provide feedback by filing issues, or by submitting pull requests, to the Github Project.

Complete example

You can look at a minimal complete example in the demo project.