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πŸ¦” Simple and complete Angular testing utilities that encourage good testing practices

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@testing-library/angular

hedgehog

Simple and complete Angular testing utilities that encourage good testing practices.


Read The Docs | Edit the docs



Build Status version downloads MIT License

All Contributors PRs Welcome Code of Conduct Discord

Watch on GitHub Star on GitHub Tweet

Table of Contents

The problem

You want to write maintainable tests for your Angular components. As a part of this goal, you want your tests to avoid including implementation details of your components and rather focus on making your tests give you the confidence for which they are intended. As part of this, you want your testbase to be maintainable in the long run so refactors of your components (changes to implementation but not functionality) don't break your tests and slow you and your team down.

This solution

The @testing-library/angular is a very lightweight solution for testing Angular components. It provides light utility functions on top of Angular and @testing-library/dom, in a way that encourages better testing practices. Its primary guiding principle is:

The more your tests resemble the way your software is used, the more confidence they can give you.

Example

counter.component.ts

@Component({
  selector: 'counter',
  template: `
    <button (click)="decrement()">-</button>
    <span>Current Count: {{ counter }}</span>
    <button (click)="increment()">+</button>
  `,
})
export class CounterComponent {
  @Input() counter = 0;

  increment() {
    this.counter += 1;
  }

  decrement() {
    this.counter -= 1;
  }
}

counter.component.spec.ts

import { render, screen, fireEvent } from '@testing-library/angular';
import { CounterComponent } from './counter.component.ts';

describe('Counter', () => {
  test('should render counter', async () => {
    await render(CounterComponent, { componentProperties: { counter: 5 } });

    expect(screen.getByText('Current Count: 5'));
  });

  test('should increment the counter on click', async () => {
    await render(CounterComponent, { componentProperties: { counter: 5 } });

    const incrementButton = screen.getByRole('button', { name: /increment/i });
    fireEvent.click(incrementButton);

    expect(screen.getByText('Current Count: 6'));
  });
});

See more examples

Installation

This module is distributed via npm which is bundled with node and should be installed as one of your project's devDependencies:

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

You may also be interested in installing jest-dom so you can use the custom jest matchers.

Docs

Guiding Principles

The more your tests resemble the way your software is used, the more confidence they can give you.

We try to only expose methods and utilities that encourage you to write tests that closely resemble how your Angular components are used.

Utilities are included in this project based on the following guiding principles:

  1. If it relates to rendering components, it deals with DOM nodes rather than component instances, nor should it encourage dealing with component instances.
  2. It should be generally useful for testing individual Angular components or full Angular applications.
  3. Utility implementations and APIs should be simple and flexible.

At the end of the day, what we want is for this library to be pretty light-weight, simple, and understandable.

Contributors

Thanks goes to these people (emoji key):


Tim Deschryver

πŸ’» πŸ“– πŸš‡ ⚠️

MichaΓ«l De Boey

πŸ“–

Ignacio Le Fluk

πŸ’» ⚠️

TamΓ‘s SzabΓ³

πŸ’»

Gregor Woiwode

πŸ’»

Toni Villena

πŸ› πŸ’» πŸ“– ⚠️

ShPelles

πŸ“–

Miluoshi

πŸ’» ⚠️

Nick McCurdy

πŸ“–

Srinivasan Sekar

πŸ“–

Bitcollage

πŸ“–

Emil Sundin

πŸ’»

Ombrax

πŸ’»

Rafael Santana

πŸ’» ⚠️ πŸ›

Benjamin Blackwood

πŸ“– ⚠️

Gustavo Porto

πŸ“–

Bo Vandersteene

πŸ’»

Janek

πŸ’» ⚠️

Gleb Irovich

πŸ’» ⚠️

Arjen

πŸ’» 🚧

Suguru Inatomi

πŸ’» πŸ€”

Amit Miran

πŸš‡

Jan-Willem Willebrands

πŸ’»

Sandro

πŸ’» πŸ›

Michael Westphal

πŸ’» ⚠️

Lukas

πŸ’»

Matan Borenkraout

🚧

mleimer

πŸ“– ⚠️

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

Docs

Read The Docs | Edit the docs

FAQ

I am using Reactive Forms and the jest-dom matcher toHaveFormValues always returns an empty object or there are missing fields. Why?

Only form elements with a name attribute will have their values passed to toHaveFormsValues.

Issues

Looking to contribute? Look for the Good First Issue label.

πŸ› Bugs

Please file an issue for bugs, missing documentation, or unexpected behavior.

See Bugs

πŸ’‘ Feature Requests

Please file an issue to suggest new features. Vote on feature requests by adding a πŸ‘. This helps maintainers prioritize what to work on.

See Feature Requests

❓ Questions

For questions related to using the library, please visit a support community instead of filing an issue on GitHub.

LICENSE

MIT

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