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vue-jest

Jest transformer for Vue Single File Components.

Installation

Since we need to support a variety of Vue and Jest versions, vue-jest doesn't follow semantic versioning.

Vue version Jest Version npm Package Branch
Vue 2 Jest 26 and below vue-jest@4
Vue 3 Jest 26 and below vue-jest@5
Vue 2 Jest 27 and above @vue/vue2-jest@27 27.x
Vue 3 Jest 27 and above @vue/vue3-jest@27 27.x
Vue 2 Jest 28 and above @vue/vue2-jest@28 28.x
Vue 3 Jest 28 and above @vue/vue3-jest@28 28.x
# Vue 2
npm install --save-dev @vue/vue2-jest@28 # (use the appropriate version)
yarn add @vue/vue2-jest@28 --dev

# Vue 3
npm install --save-dev @vue/vue3-jest@28 # (use the appropriate version)
yarn add @vue/vue3-jest@28 --dev

Setup

To use vue-jest as a transformer for your .vue files, map them to the appropriate vue-jest module:

{
  "jest": {
    "transform": {
      "^.+\\.vue$": "@vue/vue2-jest" // Update to match your installed version
    }
  }
}

A full config will look like this.

{
  "jest": {
    "moduleFileExtensions": ["js", "json", "vue"],
    "transform": {
      "^.+\\.js$": "babel-jest",
      "^.+\\.vue$": "@vue/vue2-jest"
    }
  }
}

Usage with Babel 7

If you use jest > 24.0.0 and babel-jest make sure to install babel-core@bridge

npm install --save-dev babel-core@bridge
yarn add babel-core@bridge --dev

Supported languages for SFC sections

vue-jest compiles <script />, <template />, and <style /> blocks with supported lang attributes into JavaScript that Jest can run.

Supported script languages

  • typescript (lang="ts", lang="typescript")
  • coffeescript (lang="coffee", lang="coffeescript")

Global Jest options

You can change the behavior of vue-jest by using jest.globals.

Compiler Options in Vue 3

These options can be used to define Vue compiler options in @vue/vue3-jest.

For example, to enable propsDestructureTransform:

globals: {
  'vue-jest': {
    compilerOptions: {
      propsDestructureTransform: true
    }
  }
}

or disable refTransform (which is enabled by default):

globals: {
  'vue-jest': {
    compilerOptions: {
      refTransform: false
    }
  }
}

Supporting custom blocks

A great feature of the Vue SFC compiler is that it can support custom blocks. You might want to use those blocks in your tests. To render out custom blocks for testing purposes, you'll need to write a transformer. Once you have your transformer, you'll add an entry to vue-jest's transform map. This is how vue-i18n's <i18n> custom blocks are supported in unit tests.

A package.json Example

{
  "jest": {
    "moduleFileExtensions": ["js", "json", "vue"],
    "transform": {
      "^.+\\.js$": "babel-jest",
      "^.+\\.vue$": "@vue/vue2-jest"
    },
    "globals": {
      "@vue/vue2-jest": {
        "transform": {
          "your-custom-block": "./custom-block-processor.js"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Tip: Need programmatic configuration? Use the --config option in Jest CLI, and export a .js file

A jest.config.js Example - If you're using a dedicated configuration file like you can reference and require your processor in the config file instead of using a file reference.

module.exports = {
  globals: {
    '@vue/vue2-jest': {
      transform: {
        'your-custom-block': require('./custom-block-processor')
      }
    }
  }
}

Writing a processor

Processors must return an object with a "process" method, like so...

module.exports = {
  /**
   * Process the content inside of a custom block and prepare it for execution in a testing environment
   * @param {SFCCustomBlock[]} blocks All of the blocks matching your type, returned from `@vue/component-compiler-utils`
   * @param {string} vueOptionsNamespace The internal namespace for a component's Vue Options in vue-jest
   * @param {string} filename The SFC file being processed
   * @param {Object} config The full Jest config
   * @returns {string} The code to be output after processing all of the blocks matched by this type
   */
  process({ blocks, vueOptionsNamespace, filename, config }) {}
}

templateCompiler

You can provide TemplateCompileOptions in templateCompiler section like this:

{
  "jest": {
    "globals": {
      "@vue/vue2-jest": {
        "templateCompiler": {
          "transpileOptions": {
            "transforms": {
              "dangerousTaggedTemplateString": true
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Supported template languages

  • pug (lang="pug")

    • To give options for the Pug compiler, enter them into the Jest configuration. The options will be passed to pug.compile().
    {
      "jest": {
        "globals": {
          "@vue/vue2-jest": {
            "pug": {
              "basedir": "mybasedir"
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  • jade (lang="jade")

  • haml (lang="haml")

Supported style languages

  • stylus (lang="stylus", lang="styl")

  • sass (lang="sass"), and

  • scss (lang="scss")

    • The Sass compiler supports Jest's moduleNameMapper which is the suggested way of dealing with Webpack aliases. Webpack's sass-loader uses a special syntax for indicating non-relative imports, so you'll likely need to copy this syntax into your moduleNameMapper entries if you make use of it. For aliases of bare imports (imports that require node module resolution), the aliased value must also be prepended with this ~ or vue-jest's custom resolver won't recognize it.

      {
        "jest": {
          "moduleNameMapper": {
            "^~foo/(.*)": "<rootDir>/foo/$1",
            // @import '~foo'; -> @import 'path/to/project/foo';
            "^~bar/(.*)": "~baz/lib/$1"
            // @import '~bar/qux'; -> @import 'path/to/project/node_modules/baz/lib/qux';
            // Notice how the tilde (~) was needed on the bare import to baz.
          }
        }
      }
    • To import globally included files (ie. variables, mixins, etc.), include them in the Jest configuration at jest.globals['vue-jest'].resources.scss:

      {
        "jest": {
          "globals": {
            "vue-jest": {
              "resources": {
                "scss": [
                  "./node_modules/package/_mixins.scss",
                  "./src/assets/css/globals.scss"
                ]
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }

CSS options

experimentalCSSCompile: Boolean Default true. Turn off CSS compilation

hideStyleWarn: Boolean Default false. Hide warnings about CSS compilation

resources:

{
  "jest": {
    "globals": {
      "vue-jest": {
        "hideStyleWarn": true,
        "experimentalCSSCompile": true
      }
    }
  }
}

Style options

Possbility to change style loader options (sass, scss, less etc).

styleOptions: Object Default {}.

{
  "jest": {
    "globals": {
      "vue-jest": {
        "styleOptions": {
          "quietDeps" // e.q. sass options https://sass-lang.com/documentation/js-api#quietdeps
          // unfortunately rest options like `data`, `file` doesnt work because @vue/compiler-component-utils internally overwrite options with their values
        },
      }
    }
  }
}

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Languages

  • JavaScript 74.0%
  • Vue 22.6%
  • TypeScript 2.3%
  • SCSS 0.4%
  • Pug 0.2%
  • Sass 0.2%
  • Other 0.3%