This is an example (for reference purposes) on how to use Jest and Enzyme to test React.JS 16.x component developed in TypeScript 2.x.
Jest is a decent unit testing option which provides great TypeScript support.
- Clone this repo:
git clone https://github.com/cedrickchee/react-typescript-jest-enzyme-testing react-typescript
cd react-typescript
- Install project dependencies:
yarn
# If you are using NPM
npm install
- Start Jest to run tests:
# start Jest in watch mode
yarn test -- --watch
# or if you are using NPM
npm t -- --watch
- There is no step 4. You can start developing your React component and write unit test along the way.
How's this project was created? From a clean project setup, here are the steps to recreate this example:
- Step 0: Pre-requisite
Install React.JS and TypeScript:
yarn add react react-dom typescript
# or if you are using NPM
npm i react react-dom typescript
- Step 1: Install Jest
Install the following using yarn/npm:
yarn add jest @types/jest ts-jest --dev
# or if you are using NPM
npm i jest @types/jest ts-jest -D
Explanation:
-
Install Jest framework (
jest
). -
Install the types for Jest (
@types/jest
). -
Install the TypeScript preprocessor for Jest (
ts-jest
) which allows jest to transpile TypeScript on the fly and have source-map support built in. -
Save all of these to your dev dependencies (testing is almost always a npm dev-dependency).
-
Step 2: Configure Jest
Add the following jest.config.js
file to the root of your project:
module.exports = {
"roots": [
"<rootDir>/src"
],
"transform": {
"^.+\\.tsx?$": "ts-jest"
},
"testRegex": "(/__tests__/.*|(\\.|/)(test|spec))\\.tsx?$",
"moduleFileExtensions": [
"ts",
"tsx",
"js",
"jsx",
"json",
"node"
],
}
Explanation:
-
We always recommend having all TypeScript files in a
src
folder in your project. We assume this is true and specify this using theroots
option. -
The
transform
config just tells Jest to usets-jest
for ts / tsx files. -
The
testRegex
tells Jest to look for tests in any__tests__
folder AND also any files anywhere that use the(.test|.spec).(ts|tsx)
extension e.g.checkbox.test.tsx
etc. -
The
moduleFileExtensions
tells Jest to recognize our file extensions. This is needed as we add ts/tsx into the defaults (js|jsx|json|node
). -
Step 3: Run tests
Run npx jest --watch (or ./node_modules/.bin/jest --watch
) from your project root and Jest will execute any tests you have.
Optional: Add script target for npm scripts
Add this in package.json
:
{
"test": "jest --watch"
}
-
This allows you to run the tests in watch mode with a simple
yarn test
ornpm t
. -
Step 4: Setup Enzyme
Enzyme allows you to test React components with DOM support. There are three steps to setting up Enzyme:
- Install Enzyme, types for Enzyme, a better snapshot serializer for Enzyme, enzyme-adapter-react for your React version:
yarn add enzyme @types/enzyme enzyme-to-json enzyme-adapter-react-16 --dev
# or if you are using NPM
npm i enzyme @types/enzyme enzyme-to-json enzyme-adapter-react-16 -D
- Add "snapshotSerializers" and "setupTestFrameworkScriptFile" to your
jest.config.js
:
module.exports = {
// ... ... ... TRUNCATED. Other parts as before ... ... ...
// Setup Enzyme
"snapshotSerializers": ["enzyme-to-json/serializer"],
"setupTestFrameworkScriptFile": "<rootDir>/src/setupEnzyme.ts",
}
- Create
src/setupEnzyme.ts
file.
import { configure } from 'enzyme';
import EnzymeAdapter from 'enzyme-adapter-react-16';
configure({ adapter: new EnzymeAdapter() });
That's all to it!