This is a super friendly testing library for React, inspired by express middleware, it's easily extendable. Why did I make this when you can use React's Test Utils? Because who likes typing out scryRenderedDOMComponentsWithTag
and the other method names on there. Not only that, but setting up the render process is also a hassle.
npm install legit-tests --save
import Test from 'legit-tests'
//or
import Test from 'legit-tests/no-dom' //don't include jsdom
import { expect } from 'chai'
import sinon from 'sinon'
import TestComponent from './TestComponent'
let spy = sinon.spy()
//Calling a prop
Test(<TestComponent onClick={spy}/>)
.find('button')
.simulate({method: 'click', element: 'button'})
.test(() => {
expect(spy.called).to.be.true
})
//finding an element
Test(<TestComponent/>)
.find('.box')
.elements('.box', (box) => {
expect(box.props.children).to.be.equal('found me!')
})
You can write middleware to do anything you repeatedly use. You can pass .use
a function, along with an object that it will take in. Each function will be injected with the current instance which includes:
component
- the actual component itselfinstance
- the rendered component instancehelpers
- an array you can add on to with data for the end functionExample:
mixin
below, this syntax may soon be deprecatedThis is the setState function used above.
Test(<TestComponent onClick={spy}/>)
.use(SetState, {})
...
export default function setState(state){
this.instance.setState(state)
}
The .test
function will be given the component instance and the helpers array. You can use a regular function to reference this
or an arrow function:
.test(({helpers, instance}) => { ... })
.test(function() {
//this.instance, this.helpers
})
Use .element
if you're just testing an element you found with the .find
method. The syntax is a little smaller:
Test(<TestComponent/>)
.find('.box')
.element(box => {
expect(box.props.children).to.be.equal('found me!')
})
//or specify the element
.find('.box')
.find('div')
.element('.box', box => {
expect(box.props.children).to.be.equal('found me!')
})
Use .mixin
if you want to add new middleware as methods to Test
. This gives a more natural way of using middleware:
// In this example, CustomFind middleware was added to Test by mixin
// and used if as it was a method on Test itself.
Test(<TestComponent />)
.mixin({
customFind: CustomFind
})
.customFind('cells', 'table td')
.element('cells', cells => {
expect(cells.length).to.be.equal(10)
})
Shallow -- uses React shallow rendering (no DOM)
Test(<TestComponent onClick={spy}/>, {shallow: true})
.find('button')
.simulate({method: 'click', element: 'button'})
.test(() => {
expect(spy.called).to.be.true
})
Normal -- React render into document fragment
Test(<TestComponent onClick={spy}/>)
.find('button')
.simulate({method: 'click', element: 'button'})
.test(() => {
expect(spy.called).to.be.true
})
fullDOM -- ReactDOM render into document.body.div of jsdom
Test(<section />, {fullDOM: true})
.test(function() {
expect(global.window.document.querySelector('section'))
.to.be.okay
})
.clean() // restores the document.body to empty
You can see more examples in the tests directory.
You can now test Alt stores using the same API.
import TestStore from 'legit-tests/alt/store'
TestStore(MyStore, MyActions)
.setInitialState({ todos: todos })
.addTodo({ title: "Get Beer", complete: false })
.test(({ state }) => {
expect(state.todos).to.eql(expected);
})
You can see the full documentation on the Wiki