timkindberg / jest-when

Jest support for mock argument-matched return values.
MIT License
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jest-when

build status codecov GitHub license npm ThoughtWorks Tech Radar 2020 | Adopt

Specify dynamic return values for specifically matched mocked function arguments. Flexible matchers. Feels like canonical jest syntax.

ThoughtWorks says:

jest-when is a lightweight JavaScript library that complements Jest by matching mock function call arguments. Jest is a great tool for testing the stack; jest-when allows you to expect specific arguments for mock functions which enables you to write more robust unit tests of modules with many dependencies. It's easy to use and provides great support for multiple matchers, which is why our teams have made jest-when their default choice for mocking in this space.

Introduction

jest-when allows you to use a set of the original Jest mock functions in order to train your mocks only based on parameters your mocked function is called with.

An Example

So in jest if you want to mock a return value you would do:

const fn = jest.fn()
fn.mockReturnValue('yay!')

But that will return "yay!" regardless of what arguments are send to the fn. If you want to change the return value based on the arguments, you have to use mockImplementation and it can be a bit cumbersome.

jest-when makes this easy and fun!

when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')

Now, the mock function fn will behave as follows—assuming no other trainings took place:

So the steps are:

const fn = jest.fn()                    // 1) Start with any normal jest mock function
when(fn)                                // 2) Wrap it with when()
  .calledWith(/* any matchers here */)  // 3) Add your matchers with calledWith()
  .mockReturnValue(/* some value */)    // 4) Then use any of the normal set of jest mock functions

The supported set of mock functions is:

For extended usage see the examples below.

Features

Usage Examples

Installation

npm i --save-dev jest-when

Basic usage:

import { when } from 'jest-when'

const fn = jest.fn()
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')

Supports chaining of mock trainings:

when(fn)
  .calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
  .calledWith(2).mockReturnValue('nay!')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(2)).toEqual('nay!')

Thanks to @fkloes.

when(fn)
  .calledWith(1)
  .mockReturnValueOnce('yay!')
  .mockReturnValue('nay!')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('nay!')

Thanks to @danielhusar.

Supports replacement of mock trainings:

when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')

when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('nay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('nay!')

This replacement of the training only happens for mock functions not ending in *Once. Trainings like mockReturnValueOnce are removed after a matching function call anyway.

Thanks to @fkloes.

Supports training for single calls

when(fn).calledWith(1, true, 'foo').mockReturnValueOnce('yay!')
when(fn).calledWith(1, true, 'foo').mockReturnValueOnce('nay!')

expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toEqual('nay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toBeUndefined()

Supports Promises, both resolved and rejected

when(fn).calledWith(1).mockResolvedValue('yay!')
when(fn).calledWith(2).mockResolvedValueOnce('nay!')

await expect(fn(1)).resolves.toEqual('yay!')
await expect(fn(1)).resolves.toEqual('yay!')

await expect(fn(2)).resolves.toEqual('nay!')
expect(await fn(2)).toBeUndefined()

when(fn).calledWith(3).mockRejectedValue(new Error('oh no!'))
when(fn).calledWith(4).mockRejectedValueOnce(new Error('oh no, an error again!'))

await expect(fn(3)).rejects.toThrow('oh no!')
await expect(fn(3)).rejects.toThrow('oh no!')

await expect(fn(4)).rejects.toThrow('oh no, an error again!')
expect(await fn(4)).toBeUndefined()

Supports jest.spyOn:

const theSpiedMethod = jest.spyOn(theInstance, 'theMethod');
when(theSpiedMethod)
  .calledWith(1)
  .mockReturnValue('mock');
const returnValue = theInstance.theMethod(1);
expect(returnValue).toBe('mock');

Supports jest asymmetric matchers:

Use all the same asymmetric matchers available to the toEqual() assertion

when(fn).calledWith(
  expect.anything(),
  expect.any(Number),
  expect.arrayContaining(false)
).mockReturnValue('yay!')

const result = fn('whatever', 100, [true, false])
expect(result).toEqual('yay!')

Supports function matchers:

Just wrap any regular function (cannot be a jest mock or spy!) with when.

The function will receive the arg and will be considered a match if the function returns true.

It works with both calledWith and expectCalledWith.

const allValuesTrue = when((arg) => Object.values(arg).every(Boolean))
const numberDivisibleBy3 = when((arg) => arg % 3 === 0)

when(fn)
.calledWith(allValuesTrue, numberDivisibleBy3)
.mockReturnValue('yay!')

expect(fn({ foo: true, bar: true }, 9)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn({ foo: true, bar: false }, 9)).toEqual(undefined)
expect(fn({ foo: true, bar: false }, 13)).toEqual(undefined)

Supports compound declarations:

when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('no')
when(fn).calledWith(2).mockReturnValue('way?')
when(fn).calledWith(3).mockReturnValue('yes')
when(fn).calledWith(4).mockReturnValue('way!')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('no')
expect(fn(2)).toEqual('way?')
expect(fn(3)).toEqual('yes')
expect(fn(4)).toEqual('way!')
expect(fn(5)).toEqual(undefined)

Supports matching or asserting against all of the arguments together using when.allArgs:

Pass a single special matcher, when.allArgs, if you'd like to handle all of the arguments with one function matcher. The function will receive all of the arguments as an array and you are responsible for returning true if they are a match, or false if not. The function also is provided with the powerful equals utility from Jasmine.

This allows some convenient patterns:

E.g. All args should be numbers:

const areNumbers = (args, equals) => args.every(arg => equals(arg, expect.any(Number)))
when(fn).calledWith(when.allArgs(areNumbers)).mockReturnValue('yay!')

expect(fn(3, 6, 9)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(3, 666)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(-100, 2, 3.234234, 234, 90e3)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(123, 'not a number')).toBeUndefined()

E.g. Single arg match:

const argAtIndex = (index, matcher) => when.allArgs((args, equals) => equals(args[index], matcher))

when(fn).calledWith(argAtIndex(0, expect.any(Number))).mockReturnValue('yay!')

expect(fn(3, 6, 9)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(3, 666)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(-100, 2, 3.234234, 234, 90e3)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(123, 'not a number')).toBeUndefined()

E.g. Partial match, only first defined matching args matter:

const fn = jest.fn()
const partialArgs = (...argsToMatch) => when.allArgs((args, equals) => equals(args, expect.arrayContaining(argsToMatch)))

when(fn)
  .calledWith(partialArgs(1, 2, 3))
  .mockReturnValue('x')

expect(fn(1, 2, 3)).toEqual('x')
expect(fn(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)).toEqual('x')
expect(fn(1, 2)).toBeUndefined()
expect(fn(1, 2, 4)).toBeUndefined()

Assert the args:

Use expectCalledWith instead to run an assertion that the fn was called with the provided args. Your test will fail if the jest mock function is ever called without those exact expectCalledWith params.

Disclaimer: This won't really work very well with compound declarations, because one of them will always fail, and throw an assertion error.

when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValue('x')

fn(2); // Will throw a helpful jest assertion error with args diff

Supports default behavior

Use any of defaultReturnValue, defaultResolvedValue, defaultRejectedValue, defaultImplementation to set up a default behavior, which will serve as fallback if no matcher fits.

when(fn)
  .calledWith('foo').mockReturnValue('special')
  .defaultReturnValue('default') // This line can be placed anywhere, doesn't have to be at the end

expect(fn('foo')).toEqual('special')
expect(fn('bar')).toEqual('default')

Or if you use any of mockReturnValue, mockResolvedValue, mockRejectedValue, mockImplementation directly on the object before using calledWith it will also behave as a default fallback.

// Same as above example
when(fn)
  .mockReturnValue('default')
  .calledWith('foo').mockReturnValue('special')

expect(fn('foo')).toEqual('special')
expect(fn('bar')).toEqual('default')

One idea is to set up a default implementation that throws an error if an improper call is made to the mock.

when(fn)
  .calledWith(correctArgs)
  .mockReturnValue(expectedValue)
  .defaultImplementation(unsupportedCallError)

// A default implementation that fails your test
function unsupportedCallError(...args) {
  throw new Error(`Wrong args: ${JSON.stringify(args, null, 2)}`);
}

Supports custom mockImplementation

You could use this to call callbacks passed to your mock fn or other custom functionality.

const cb = jest.fn()

when(fn).calledWith(cb).mockImplementation(callbackArg => callbackArg())

fn(cb)

expect(cb).toBeCalled()

Thanks to @idan-at.

Supports reseting mocks between tests

You could use this to prevent mocks from carrying state between tests or assertions.

const { when, resetAllWhenMocks } = require('jest-when')
const fn = jest.fn()

when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValueOnce('x')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('x')

resetAllWhenMocks()

when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValueOnce('z')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('z')

Thanks to @whoaa512.

Supports verifying that all mocked functions were called

Call verifyAllWhenMocksCalled after your test to assert that all mocks were used.

const { when, verifyAllWhenMocksCalled } = require('jest-when')
const fn = jest.fn()

when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValueOnce('x')

expect(fn(1)).toEqual('x')

verifyAllWhenMocksCalled() // passes
const { when, verifyAllWhenMocksCalled } = require('jest-when')
const fn = jest.fn()

when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValueOnce('x')

verifyAllWhenMocksCalled() // fails

Thanks to @roaclark.

Contributors (in order of contribution)