Test Renderer
Importing
import TestRenderer from 'react-test-renderer'; // ES6
const TestRenderer = require('react-test-renderer'); // ES5 with npm
Overview
This package provides a React renderer that can be used to render React components to pure JavaScript objects, without depending on the DOM or a native mobile environment.
Essentially, this package makes it easy to grab a snapshot of the platform view hierarchy (similar to a DOM tree) rendered by a React DOM or React Native component without using a browser or jsdom.
Example:
import TestRenderer from 'react-test-renderer';
function Link(props) {
return <a href={props.page}>{props.children}</a>;
}
const testRenderer = TestRenderer.create(
<Link page="https://www.facebook.com/">Facebook</Link>
);
console.log(testRenderer.toJSON());
// { type: 'a',
// props: { href: 'https://www.facebook.com/' },
// children: [ 'Facebook' ] }
You can use Jest’s snapshot testing feature to automatically save a copy of the JSON tree to a file and check in your tests that it hasn’t changed: Learn more about it.
You can also traverse the output to find specific nodes and make assertions about them.
import TestRenderer from 'react-test-renderer';
function MyComponent() {
return (
<div>
<SubComponent foo="bar" />
<p className="my">Hello</p>
</div>
)
}
function SubComponent() {
return (
<p className="sub">Sub</p>
);
}
const testRenderer = TestRenderer.create(<MyComponent />);
const testInstance = testRenderer.root;
expect(testInstance.findByType(SubComponent).props.foo).toBe('bar');
expect(testInstance.findByProps({className: "sub"}).children).toEqual(['Sub']);
TestRenderer
TestRenderer instance
testRenderer.toJSON()
testRenderer.toTree()
testRenderer.update()
testRenderer.unmount()
testRenderer.getInstance()
testRenderer.root
TestInstance
testInstance.find()
testInstance.findByType()
testInstance.findByProps()
testInstance.findAll()
testInstance.findAllByType()
testInstance.findAllByProps()
testInstance.instance
testInstance.type
testInstance.props
testInstance.parent
testInstance.children
Reference
TestRenderer.create()
TestRenderer.create(element, options);
Create a TestRenderer
instance with the passed React element. It doesn’t use the real DOM, but it still fully renders the component tree into memory so you can make assertions about it. The returned instance has the following methods and properties.
testRenderer.toJSON()
testRenderer.toJSON()
Return an object representing the rendered tree. This tree only contains the platform-specific nodes like <div>
or <View>
and their props, but doesn’t contain any user-written components. This is handy for snapshot testing.
testRenderer.toTree()
testRenderer.toTree()
Return an object representing the rendered tree. Unlike toJSON()
, the representation is more detailed than the one provided by toJSON()
, and includes the user-written components. You probably don’t need this method unless you’re writing your own assertion library on top of the test rendererer.
testRenderer.update()
testRenderer.update(element)
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.
testRenderer.unmount()
testRenderer.unmount()
Unmount the in-memory tree, triggering the appropriate lifecycle events.
testRenderer.getInstance()
testRenderer.getInstance()
Return the instance corresponding to the root element, if available. This will not work if the root element is a functional component because they don’t have instances.
testRenderer.root
testRenderer.root
Returns the root “test instance” object that is useful for making assertions about specific nodes in the tree. You can use it to find other “test instances” deeper below.
testInstance.find()
testInstance.find(test)
Find a single descendant test instance for which test(testInstance)
returns true
. If test(testInstance)
does not return true
for exactly one test instance, it will throw an error.
testInstance.findByType()
testInstance.findByType(type)
Find a single descendant test instance with the provided type
. If there is not exactly one test instance with the provided type
, it will throw an error.
testInstance.findByProps()
testInstance.findByProps(props)
Find a single descendant test instance with the provided props
. If there is not exactly one test instance with the provided props
, it will throw an error.
testInstance.findAll()
testInstance.findAll(test)
Find all descendant test instances for which test(testInstance)
returns true
.
testInstance.findAllByType()
testInstance.findAllByType(type)
Find all descendant test instances with the provided type
.
testInstance.findAllByProps()
testInstance.findAllByProps(props)
Find all descendant test instances with the provided props
.
testInstance.instance
testInstance.instance
The component instance corresponding to this test instance. It is only available for class components, as functional components don’t have instances. It matches the this
value inside the given component.
testInstance.type
testInstance.type
The component type corresponding to this test instance. For example, a <Button />
component has a type of Button
.
testInstance.props
testInstance.props
The props corresponding to this test instance. For example, a <Button size="small />
component has {size: 'small'}
as props.
testInstance.parent
testInstance.parent
The parent test instance of this test instance.
testInstance.children
testInstance.children
The children test instances of this test instance.
Ideas
You can pass createNodeMock
function to TestRenderer.create
as the option, which allows for custom mock refs.
createNodeMock
accepts the current element and should return a mock ref object.
This is useful when you test a component that relies on refs.
import TestRenderer from 'react-test-renderer';
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.input = null;
}
componentDidMount() {
this.input.focus();
}
render() {
return <input type="text" ref={el => this.input = el} />
}
}
let focused = false;
TestRenderer.create(
<MyComponent />,
{
createNodeMock: (element) => {
if (element.type === 'input') {
// mock a focus function
return {
focus: () => {
focused = true;
}
};
}
return null;
}
}
);
expect(focused).toBe(true);