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Component testing

Unit testing your Redux actions and reducers is nice, but you can do even more to make sure nothing breaks your application. Since React is the view layer of your app, let's see how to test Components too!

Shallow rendering

React provides us with a nice add-on called the Shallow Renderer. This renderer will render a React component one level deep. Lets take a look at what that means with a simple <Button> component.

This component renders a <button> element containing a checkmark icon and some text:

// Button.js

import React from 'react';
import CheckmarkIcon from './CheckmarkIcon';

function Button(props) {
  return (
    <button className="btn" onClick={props.onClick}>
      <CheckmarkIcon />
      {React.Children.only(props.children)}
    </button>
  );
}

export default Button;

Note: This is a stateless ("dumb") component

It might be used in another component like this:

// HomePage.js

import Button from './Button';

function HomePage() {
  return <Button onClick={this.doSomething}>Click me!</Button>;
}

Note: This is a stateful ("smart") component!

When rendered normally with the standard ReactDOM.render function, this will be the HTML output (Comments added in parallel to compare structures in HTML from JSX source):

<button>                           <!-- <Button>             -->
  <i class="fa fa-checkmark"></i>  <!--   <CheckmarkIcon />  -->
  Click Me!                        <!--   { props.children } -->
</button>                          <!-- </Button>            -->

Conversely, when rendered with the shallow renderer, we'll get a String containing this "HTML":

<button>              <!-- <Button>             -->
  <CheckmarkIcon />   <!--   NOT RENDERED!      -->
  Click Me!           <!--   { props.children } -->
</button>             <!-- </Button>            -->

If we test our Button with the normal renderer and there's a problem with the CheckmarkIcon then the test for the Button will fail as well. This makes it harder to find the culprit. Using the shallow renderer, we isolate the problem's cause since we don't render any other components other than the one we're testing!

The problem with the shallow renderer is that all assertions have to be done manually, and you cannot do anything that needs the DOM.

react-testing-library

In order to write more maintainable tests which also resemble more closely the way our component is used in real life, we have included react-testing-library. This library renders our component within an actual DOM and provides utilities for querying it.

Let's give it a go with our <Button /> component, shall we? First, let's check that it renders our component with its children, if any, and second that it handles clicks.

This is our test setup:

import React from 'react';
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-testing-library';
import Button from '../Button';

describe('<Button />', () => {
  it('renders and matches the snapshot', () => {});

  it('handles clicks', () => {});
});

Snapshot testing

Let's start by ensuring that it renders our component and no changes happened to it since the last time it was successfully tested.

We will do so by rendering it and creating a snapshot which can be compared with a previously committed snapshot. If no snapshot exists, a new one is created.

For this, we first call render. This will render our <Button /> component into a container, by default a <div>, which is appended to document.body. We then create a snapshot and expect that this snapshot is the same as the existing snapshot, taken in a previous run of this test and committed to the repository.

it('renders and matches the snapshot', () => {
  const text = 'Click me!';
  const { container } = render(<Button>{text}</Button>);

  expect(container.firstChild).toMatchSnapshot();
});

render returns an object that has a property container and yes, this is the container our <Button /> component has been rendered in.

As this is rendered within a normal DOM we can query our component with container.firstChild. This will be our subject for a snapshot. Snapshots are placed in the __snapshots__ folder within our tests folder. Make sure you commit these snapshots to your repository.

Great! So, now if anyone makes any change to our <Button /> component the test will fail and we get notified of what changed.

Behavior testing

Onwards to our last and most advanced test: checking that our <Button /> handles clicks correctly.

We'll use a mock function for this. A mock function is a function that keeps track of if, how often, and with what arguments it has been called. We pass this function as the onClick handler to our component, simulate a click and, lastly, check that our mock function was called:

it('handles clicks', () => {
  const onClickMock = jest.fn();
  const text = 'Click me!';
  const { getByText } = render(<Button onClick={onClickMock}>{text}</Button>);

  fireEvent.click(getByText(text));
  expect(onClickSpy).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
});

Our finished test file looks like this:

import React from 'react';
import { render, fireEvent } from 'react-testing-library';
import Button from '../Button';

describe('<Button />', () => {
  it('renders and matches the snapshot', () => {
    const text = 'Click me!';
    const { container } = render(<Button>{text}</Button>);

    expect(container.firstChild).toMatchSnapshot();
  });

  it('handles clicks', () => {
    const onClickMock = jest.fn();
    const text = 'Click me!';
    const { getByText } = render(<Button onClick={onClickMock}>{text}</Button>);
  
    fireEvent.click(getByText(text));
    expect(onClickSpy).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
  });
});

And that's how you unit test your components and make sure they work correctly!

Also have a look at our example application. It deliberately shows some variations of implementing tests with react-testing-library.

Continue to learn how to test your components remotely!