id | title |
---|---|
api |
API |
This page gathers public API of react-native-testing-library
along with usage examples.
Defined as:
function render(
component: React.Element<any>,
options?: {
/* You won't often use this, but it's helpful when testing refs */
createNodeMock: (element: React.Element<any>) => any,
}
): RenderResult {}
Deeply renders given React element and returns helpers to query the output components structure.
import { render } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const { getByTestId, getByText /*...*/ } = render(<Component />);
Returns a RenderResult
object with following properties:
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
with matching testID
prop. Throws when no matches.
Note: most methods like this one return a ReactTestInstance
with following properties that you may be interested in:
type ReactTestInstance = {
type: string | Function,
props: { [propName: string]: any },
parent: null | ReactTestInstance,
children: Array<ReactTestInstance | string>,
};
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
with matching text – may be a string or regular expression. Throws when no matches.
A method returning an array of ReactTestInstance
s with matching text – may be a string or regular expression.
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
for a TextInput
with a matching placeholder – may be a string or regular expression. Throws when no matches.
A method returning an array of ReactTestInstance
s for TextInput
's with a matching placeholder – may be a string or regular expression.
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
with matching props object. Throws when no matches.
A method returning an array of ReactTestInstance
s with matching props object.
Note: added in v1.4
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
with matching a React component type. Throws when no matches.
Note: added in v1.4
A method returning an array of ReactTestInstance
s with matching a React component type.
A method returning a ReactTestInstance
with matching a React component type. Throws when no matches.
This method has been deprecated because using it results in fragile tests that may break between minor React Native versions. It will be removed in next major release (v2.0). Use
getByType
instead.
A method returning an array of ReactTestInstance
s with matching a React component type.
This method has been deprecated because using it results in fragile tests that may break between minor React Native versions. It will be removed in next major release (v2.0). Use
getAllByType
instead.
Re-render the in-memory tree with a new root element. This simulates a React update at the root. If the new element has the same type and key as the previous element, the tree will be updated; otherwise, it will re-mount a new tree.
Unmount the in-memory tree, triggering the appropriate lifecycle events
When using React context providers, like Redux Provider, you'll likely want to wrap rendered component with them. In such cases it's convenient to create your custom render
method. Follow this great guide on how to set this up.
Prints deeply rendered component passed to render
with optional message on top. Uses debug.deep under the hood, but it's easier to use.
const { debug } = render(<Component />);
debug('optional message');
logs optional message and colored JSX:
optional message
<TouchableOpacity
activeOpacity={0.2}
onPress={[Function bound fn]}
>
<Text>Press me</Text>
</TouchableOpacity>
Prints shallowly rendered component passed to render
with optional message on top. Uses debug.shallow under the hood, but it's easier to use.
Get the rendered component JSON representation, e.g. for snapshot testing.
Shallowly renders given React component. Since it doesn't return helpers to query the output, it's mostly advised to used for snapshot testing (short snapshots are best for code reviewers).
import { shallow } from 'react-native-testing-library';
test('Component has a structure', () => {
const { output } = shallow(<Component />);
expect(output).toMatchSnapshot();
});
Invokes a given event handler (whether native or custom) on the element, bubbling to the root of the rendered tree. The three most common events (press
, changeText
, and scroll
) have been aliased for convenience.
Invokes named event handler on the element or parent element in the tree. For better readability, fireEvent
strips the on
part of the handler prop name, so it will fire onMyCustomEvent
when myCustomEvent
is passed as eventName
.
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-native-testing-library';
import { MyComponent } from './MyComponent';
const onEventMock = jest.fn();
const { getByTestId } = render(
<MyComponent testID="custom" onMyCustomEvent={onEventMock} />
);
fireEvent(getByTestId('custom'), 'myCustomEvent');
An example using fireEvent
with native events that aren't already aliased by the fireEvent
api.
import { TextInput, View } from 'react-native';
import { fireEvent, render } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const onBlurMock = jest.fn();
const { getByPlaceholder } = render(
<View>
<TextInput placeholder="my placeholder" onBlur={onBlurMock} />
</View>
);
fireEvent(getByPlaceholder('my placeholder'), 'blur');
Invokes press
event handler on the element or parent element in the tree.
import { View, Text, TouchableOpacity } from 'react-native';
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const onPressMock = jest.fn();
const { getByTestId } = render(
<View>
<TouchableOpacity onPress={onPressMock} testID="button">
<Text>Press me</Text>
</TouchableOpacity>
</View>
);
fireEvent.press(getByTestId('button'));
Invokes changeText
event handler on the element or parent element in the tree.
import { View, TextInput } from 'react-native';
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const onChangeTextMock = jest.fn();
const CHANGE_TEXT = 'content';
const { getByTestId } = render(
<View>
<TextInput testID="text-input" onChangeText={onChangeTextMock} />
</View>
);
fireEvent.changeText(getByTestId('text-input'), CHANGE_TEXT);
Invokes scroll
event handler on the element or parent element in the tree.
import { ScrollView, TextInput } from 'react-native';
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const onScrollMock = jest.fn();
const eventData = {
nativeEvent: {
contentOffset: {
y: 200,
},
},
};
const { getByTestId } = render(
<ScrollView testID="scroll-view" onScroll={onScrollMock}>
<Text>XD</Text>
</ScrollView>
);
fireEvent.scroll(getByTestId('scroll-view'), eventData);
Defined as:
function waitForExpect<T: *>(
expectation: () => T,
timeout: number = 4500,
interval: number = 50
): Promise<T> {}
Waits for non-deterministic periods of time until your element appears or times out. waitForExpect
periodically calls expectation
every interval
milliseconds to determine whether the element appeared or not.
import { render, waitForElement } from 'react-testing-library';
test('waiting for an Banana to be ready', async () => {
const { getByText } = render(<Banana />);
await waitForElement(() => getByText('Banana ready'));
});
If you're using Jest's Timer Mocks, remember not to use async/await
syntax as it will stall your tests.
Log prettified shallowly rendered component or test instance (just like snapshot) to stdout.
import { debug } from 'react-native-testing-library';
debug(<Component />);
debug.shallow(<Component />); // an alias for `debug`
logs:
<TouchableOpacity
activeOpacity={0.2}
onPress={[Function bound fn]}
>
<TextComponent
text="Press me"
/>
</TouchableOpacity>
There's also debug.deep
that renders deeply to stdout.
import { debug } from 'react-native-testing-library';
debug.deep(<Component />);
debug.deep(toJSON(), 'actually debug JSON too'); // useful when Component state changes
logs:
<View
accessible={true}
isTVSelectable={true}
onResponderGrant={[Function bound touchableHandleResponderGrant]}
// ... more props
style={
Object {
\\"opacity\\": 1,
}
}
>
<Text>
Press me
</Text>
</View>
Optionally you can provide a string message as a second argument to debug
, which will be displayed right after the component.
Waits for microtasks queue to flush. Useful if you want to wait for some promises with async/await
.
import { flushMicrotasksQueue, render } from 'react-native-testing-library';
test('fetch data', async () => {
const { getByText } = render(<FetchData />);
getByText('fetch');
await flushMicrotasksQueue();
expect(getByText('fetch').props.title).toBe('loaded');
});
Each of the get APIs listed in the render section above have a complimentary query API. The get APIs will throw errors if a proper node cannot be found. This is normally the desired effect. However, if you want to make an assertion that an element is not present in the hierarchy, then you can use the query API instead:
import { render } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const { queryByText } = render(<Form />);
const submitButton = queryByText('submit');
expect(submitButton).toBeNull(); // it doesn't exist
Each of the query APIs have a corresponding queryAll version that always returns an Array of matching nodes. getAll is the same but throws when the array has a length of 0.
import { render } from 'react-native-testing-library';
const { queryAllByText } = render(<Forms />);
const submitButtons = queryAllByText('submit');
expect(submitButtons).toHaveLength(3); // expect 3 elements