Developer-friendly and complete React Native testing utilities that encourage good testing practices.
You want to write maintainable tests for your React Native 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 tests 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.
The React Native Testing Library (RNTL) is a comprehensive solution for testing React Native components. It provides React Native runtime simulation on top of react-test-renderer
, 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.
This project is inspired by React Testing Library. Tested to work with Jest, but it should work with other test runners as well.
Open a Terminal in your project's folder and run:
# Yarn install:
yarn add --dev @testing-library/react-native
# NPM install
npm install --save-dev @testing-library/react-native
This library has a peerDependencies
listing for react-test-renderer
. Make sure that your react-test-renderer
version matches exactly the react
version, avoid using ^
in version number.
You can use the built-in Jest matchers automatically by having any import from @testing-library/react-native
in your test.
import { render, screen, userEvent } from '@testing-library/react-native';
import { QuestionsBoard } from '../QuestionsBoard';
// It is recommended to use userEvent with fake timers
// Some events involve duration so your tests may take a long time to run.
jest.useFakeTimers();
test('form submits two answers', async () => {
const questions = ['q1', 'q2'];
const onSubmit = jest.fn();
const user = userEvent.setup();
render(<QuestionsBoard questions={questions} onSubmit={onSubmit} />);
const answerInputs = screen.getAllByLabelText('answer input');
// simulates the user focusing on TextInput and typing text one char at a time
await user.type(answerInputs[0], 'a1');
await user.type(answerInputs[1], 'a2');
// simulates the user pressing on any pressable element
await user.press(screen.getByRole('button', { name: 'Submit' }));
expect(onSubmit).toHaveBeenCalledWith({
1: { q: 'q1', a: 'a1' },
2: { q: 'q2', a: 'a2' },
});
});
You can find the source of QuestionsBoard
component and this example here.
React Native Testing Library consists of following APIs:
render
function - render your UI components for testing purposesscreen
object - access rendered UI:- Jest matchers - validate assumptions about your UI
- User Event - simulate common user interactions like
press
ortype
in a realistic way - Fire Event - simulate any component event in a simplified way
renderHook
function - render hooks for testing purposes- Miscellaneous APIs:
- Async utils:
findBy*
queries,waitFor
,waitForElementToBeRemoved
- Configuration:
configure
,resetToDefaults
- Accessibility:
isHiddenFromAccessibility
- Other:
within
,act
,cleanup
- Async utils:
Check out our list of Community Resources about RNTL.
React Native Testing Library is an open source project and will always remain free to use. If you think it's cool, please star it π. Callstack is a group of React and React Native geeks, contact us at hello@callstack.com if you need any help with these or just want to say hi!
Like the project? βοΈ Join the team who does amazing stuff for clients and drives React Native Open Source! π₯
Supported and used by Rally Health.