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dom-testing-library with ANYTHING

Anything you can render to the DOM, you can test with dom-testing-library.

This repo is a bunch of simple examples of using dom-testing-library to test a Counter component in various frameworks. If your framework of choice is not listed here, please add it!

Contributing

NOTE: In the interest of full disclosure, this repository will be used by me to create a course on testing for which I will be paid.

The prime example is this react version:

// adds handy assertions we'll use
import 'jest-dom/extend-expect'

// framework imports
import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'

// dom-testing-library utilities
// note: if your framework does not apply updates to the DOM synchronously
// then you can use the fireEventAsync export in ./fire-event-async.js
// see hyperapp.test.js for an example of this.
import {getQueriesForElement, fireEvent} from 'dom-testing-library'

// the component in your framework
class Counter extends React.Component {
  state = {count: 0}
  increment = () => this.setState(({count}) => ({count: count + 1}))
  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <button onClick={this.increment}>{this.state.count}</button>
      </div>
    )
  }
}

// a generic "render" method that you could use for any component for
// your framework
function render(ui) {
  const container = document.createElement('div')
  document.body.appendChild(container)
  ReactDOM.render(ui, container)
  return {
    container,
    ...getQueriesForElement(container),
  }
}

// the test.
// This test _should_ look almost identical between each framework
// that's the idea that I'm trying to get across in this repo!
test('renders a counter', () => {
  const {getByText} = render(<Counter />)
  const counter = getByText('0')
  fireEvent.click(counter)
  expect(counter).toHaveTextContent('1')

  fireEvent.click(counter)
  expect(counter).toHaveTextContent('2')
})

If you can make your example resemble that, I would be thrilled :)

IMPORTANT Notes

I want to keep things as simple as possible, but I also want to be true to what's typical for a given framework. If your framework strongly encourages the use of TypeScript for example, then please feel free to use TypeScript (Jest should already be configured to pick it up properly).

If Jest is not the testing framework of choice for your web framework, I'd still prefer to stick with Jest. Hopefully it shouldn't make much of a difference for the test itself.

Try really hard to keep everything in a single file, even if that means authoring your component in a slightly non-typical way.

This project is setup with prettier, husky, and lint-staged. That means that when you commit, a git commit hook will automatically format the files you're changing and run the tests relevant to those files. Neat right?

LICENSE

MIT

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you can use dom-testing-library with anything that renders to the DOM

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  • JavaScript 88.4%
  • TypeScript 11.6%