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    @angular-extensions/testing-library

Test your Angular components with the dom-testing-library


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@angular-extensions/testing-library

Lightweight utility functions to test Angular components.

Read The Docs | Edit the docs


Build status npm Semantically released Styled with prettier MIT License Code of Conduct

Table of Contents

Installation

Install @angular-extensions/testing-library from npm and add it your devDependencies:

npm install @angular-extensions/testing-library --save-dev

Why

  • test your UI components the way your users are using it
  • making your tests resilient to implementation changes

What

@angular-extensions/testing-library is an Angular adapter around dom-testing-library, which provides lightweight utility functions to test UI components. Your tests will work with actual DOM nodes.

How

createComponent

This library only consists of one function, createComponent which is used to setup the Angular TestBed and creates the component fixture.

This method can be used in two ways:

Based on a template:

import { createComponent } from '@angular-extensions/testing-library';

createComponent('<my-component [prop]="1"></my-component>', options);

Based on a component type:

import { createComponent } from '@angular-extensions/testing-library';

createComponent(
  {
    component: MyComponent,
    parameters: {
      prop: 1,
    },
  },
  options,
);

The second parameter in createComponent is the options parameter, which looks like this:

{
  detectChanges?: boolean = true;
  declarations: any[] = [];
  providers?: any[] = [];
  imports?: any[] = [];
  schemas?: any[] = [];
}

detectChanges: runs detectChanges on the fixture

declarations: passed to the TestBed

providers: passed to the TestBed

imports: passed to the TestBed

schemas: passed to the TestBed

The createComponent function returns an object consisting all of the query functions from dom-testing-library, all the event functions exposed from fireEvent, and adds the following properties:

Every event runs detectChanges on the fixture.

container: HTMLElement

The DOM node containing the Angular component.

All of the dom-testing-library query functions are binded to this container.

debug() => void

Prints out the container.

fixture: any

The Angular fixture.

getFromTestBed(token: any, notFoundValue?: any) => any

Calls the the Angular TestBed.get function.

Usage

You can find some examples in the tests folder.

Here is how the "default" specifications can be written with @angular-extensions/testing-library.

Before:

import { TestBed, async } from '@angular/core/testing';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

describe('AppComponent', () => {
  beforeEach(async(() => {
    TestBed.configureTestingModule({
      declarations: [AppComponent],
    }).compileComponents();
  }));

  it(`should have as title 'my-awesome-app'`, async(() => {
    const fixture = TestBed.createComponent(AppComponent);
    const app = fixture.debugElement.componentInstance;
    expect(app.title).toEqual('my-awesome-app');
  }));

  it(`should render title in a h1 tag`, async(() => {
    const fixture = TestBed.createComponent(AppComponent);
    fixture.detectChanges();
    const compiled = fixture.debugElement.nativeElement;
    expect(compiled.querySelector('h1').textContent).toContain('Welcome to my-awesome-app!');
  }));
});

After:

import { createComponent } from '@angular-extensions/testing-library';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

it(`should have as title 'my-awesome-app'`, async () => {
  const { getByText } = await createComponent('<app-root></app-root>', {
    declarations: [AppComponent],
  });
  expect(getByText('Welcome to my-awesome-app!')).toBeDefined();
});

it(`should render title in a h1 tag`, async () => {
  const { container } = await createComponent(
    {
      component: AppComponent,
    },
    {
      declarations: [AppComponent],
    },
  );
  expect(container.querySelector('h1').textContent).toContain('Welcome to my-awesome-app!');
});

LICENSE

MIT

Keywords

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Last updated on 24 Mar 2019

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