spyfu-vue-factory
v0.7.4
Published
Unit testing factory for Vue components.
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spyfu-vue-factory
Installation
This utility creates factory functions for Vue components. To get started, install through NPM or Yarn.
# install through npm
$ npm install spyfu-vue-factory
# or with yarn
$ yarn add spyfu-vue-factory
Basic usage
To create a component factory, pass any child components, routes, and vuex modules to the factory
function. All three of these properties are optional.
import { factory } from 'spyfu-vue-factory';
const mount = factory({
components: {
'child-component': childComponent,
},
modules: {
exampleVuexModule,
},
routes: [
exampleRoute,
],
});
Once you've made your factory, you may use it to instantiate Vue components.
const vm = mount({
template: `<div>Hello from a test component</div>`,
});
Initial Vuex state may be supplied as the second argument. This state will be deeply merged with the default Vuex state.
const vm = mount({
template: `<div>Hello from a test component</div>`,
}, {
moduleNamespace: {
key: 'new value',
},
});
Stubbing named routes
Occasionally in tests that interact with vue-router
, you'll see the following error.
[vue-router] Route with name 'whatever' does not exist
This is usually caused by trying to render a <router-link>
component using a named route that your test factory does not know about. To remedy this, simply pass in the route name to the routes
array.
const mount = factory({
routes: [
'whatever',
],
});
Using a custom Vue constructor
Optionally, the factory can work with a sub-classed Vue constructor. To do this, provide a Vue
property in your factory options.
const mount = factory({
Vue: Vue.extend(/* ... */),
});
License
Copyright (c) 2017-present, SpyFu