I used vue-cli to create sample project vue init webpack my-test3, and opted for including both e2e and unit tests.
Question 1: Based on documentation for template filters I tried to add new filter as such in main.js:
import Vue from 'vue'
import App from './App'
/* eslint-disable no-new */
new Vue({
el: '#app',
template: '<App/>',
components: { App },
filters: {
capitalize: function (value) {
if (!value) return ''
value = value.toString()
return value.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + value.slice(1)
}
}
})
And my App.vue:
<template>
<div id="app">
<img src="./assets/logo.png">
<hello></hello>
<world></world>
<div class="test-test">{{ 'tesT' | capitalize }}</div>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import Hello from './components/Hello'
import World from './components/World'
export default {
name: 'app',
components: {
Hello,
World
}
}
</script>
I get warning(error):
[Vue warn]: Failed to resolve filter: capitalize (found in component <app>)
If I modify main.js to register filter before initializing new Vue app, then it works without problem.
import Vue from 'vue'
import App from './App'
Vue.filter('capitalize', function (value) {
if (!value) return ''
value = value.toString()
return value.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + value.slice(1)
})
/* eslint-disable no-new */
new Vue({
el: '#app',
template: '<App/>',
components: { App }
})
Why one works and other not?
Question 2: With example above that works Vue.filter(..., I added a test for World.vue component:
<template>
<div class="world">
<h1>{{ msg | capitalize }}</h1>
<h2>{{ desc }}</h2>
Items (<span>{{ items.length }}</span>)
<ul v-for="item in items">
<li>{{ item }}</li>
</ul>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'world',
data () {
return {
msg: 'worldly App',
desc: 'This is world description.',
items: [ 'Mon', 'Wed', 'Fri', 'Sun' ]
}
}
}
</script>
And World.spec.js:
import Vue from 'vue'
import World from 'src/components/World'
Vue.filter('capitalize', function (value) {
if (!value) return ''
value = value.toString()
return value.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + value.slice(1)
})
describe('World.vue', () => {
it('should render correct title', () => {
const vm = new Vue({
el: document.createElement('div'),
render: (h) => h(World)
})
expect(vm.$el.querySelector('.world h1').textContent)
.to.equal('Worldly App')
})
it('should render correct description', () => {
const vm = new Vue({
el: document.createElement('div'),
render: (w) => w(World)
})
expect(vm.$el.querySelector('.world h2').textContent)
.to.equal('This is world description.')
})
})
For the above test to pass, I need to include Vue.filter(... definition for filter capitalize, otherwise tests would fail. So my question is, how to structure filters/components and initialize them, so testing is easier?
I feel like I should not have to register filters in unit tests, that should be part of the component initialization. But if component is inheriting/using filter defined from main app, testing component will not work.
Any suggestions, comments, reading materials?
A good practice is create a filters folder and define your filters inside this folder in individual files and define all your filters globally if you want to have access to them in all of your components, eg:
// capitalize.js
export default function capitalize(value) {
if (!value) return '';
value = value.toString().toLowerCase();
value = /\.\s/.test(value) ? value.split('. ') : [value];
value.forEach((part, index) => {
let firstLetter = 0;
part = part.trim();
firstLetter = part.split('').findIndex(letter => /[a-zA-Z]/.test(letter));
value[index] = part.split('');
value[index][firstLetter] = value[index][firstLetter].toUpperCase();
value[index] = value[index].join('');
});
return value.join('. ').trim();
}
To test it successfully and if you use #vue/test-utils, to test your single file components, you can do that with createLocalVue, like this:
// your-component.spec.js
import { createLocalVue, shallowMount } from '#vue/test-utils';
import capitalize from '../path/to/your/filter/capitalize.js';
import YOUR_COMPONENT from '../path/to/your/component.vue';
describe('Describe YOUR_COMPONENT component', () => {
const localVue = createLocalVue();
// this is the key line
localVue.filter('capitalize', capitalize);
const wrapper = shallowMount(YOUR_COMPONENT, {
// here you can define the required data and mocks
localVue,
propsData: {
yourProp: 'value of your prop',
},
mocks: {
// here you can define all your mocks
// like translate function and others.
},
});
it('passes the sanity check and creates a wrapper', () => {
expect(wrapper.isVueInstance()).toBe(true);
});
});
I hope to help you.
Regards.
My best guess is that if you define filters inside a component, they will be only available for use inside this component. In your case, you can only use capitalize in the main Vue instance, not its child components. Moving this to a global level solves the issue.
For the second question, you are doing the right thing by adding the filter definition in the testing file.
Related
I am building a new Vue component that uses a namespaced Vuex getter to access a list of column names. The actual component compiles and runs.
In my Mocha unit tests, I created a mocked getter that returns a list of strings called "allColumns". When I run the unit tests, during ShallowMount, the component's methods try to access this.allColumns during initialization, but the value is always undefined. I can see the value I want in this.$store.getters.allColumns, but it is not getting mapped to this.allColumns like it does when I open the page in a browser.
There is a lot of information out there about how to mock getters in a test and how to use mapGetters with a namespace, but I have not found any documentation about namespaced getters in a Mocha test.
test.spec.js
let propsData;
let getters;
let store;
beforeEach(() => {
debugger;
propsData = {
players: samplePlayerObject,
metadata: sampleMetadataObject
};
getters = {
allColumns: () => ["playerid","last","first","birthday","height"]
}
store = new Vuex.Store({
getters
});
})
it('initializes the component', () => {
const wrapper = shallowMount(PlayerFilterTable, { propsData, localVue, store });
});
vue component
<template>
<div class="player-filter-table">
<table>
<tr>
<th v-for="(key, index) in GetColumns()"
v-bind:id="'header-' + key"
v-bind:key="index"
#click="HeaderClick(key)"
>...</th>
</tr>
</table>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import { mapGetters } from 'vuex';
export default {
computed: {
...mapGetters({
allColumns: 'playerFilter/allColumns'
})
},
GetColumns() {
// this.allColumns is defined when running in browser, but undefined when loaded from a Mocha test
return this.allColumns.filter(column => [*some filter criteria*]);
}
</script>
When shallowMount runs in test.spec.js, I expect the component to load successfully and then continue on to run my tests, but instead I get an error that says TypeError: Cannot read property 'filter' of undefined because this.allColumns is not defined.
Use modules with namespaced: true:
import { createLocalVue, shallowMount } from '#vue/test-utils';
import Vuex from 'vuex';
import PlayerFilterTable from '~/whatever';
const localVue = createLocalVue();
localVue.use(Vuex);
let propsData, getters, store, wrapper, consoleSpy;
describe('PlayerFilterTable', () => {
beforeEach(() => {
consoleSpy = jest.spyOn(console, 'error');
propsData = {
players: samplePlayerObject,
metadata: sampleMetadataObject
};
getters = {
allColumns: () => ["playerid", "last", "first", "birthday", "height"]
};
store = new Vuex.Store({
modules: {
playerFilter: {
namespaced: true,
getters
}
}
});
wrapper = shallowMount(PlayerFilterTable, {
propsData,
localVue,
store
});
});
afterEach(() => {
expect(consoleSpy).not.toHaveBeenCalled();
});
it('should render correctly', () => {
expect(wrapper.is(PlayerFilterTable)).toBe(true);
expect(wrapper.html()).toMatchSnapshot();
})
})
If you use getters from more than one module you could group them up under different props of getters and assign to each module accordingly.
I work on a website with multiple components that contain other components. Now I would like to test if the save button of a form is deactivated correctly if no data is set. I am using vuetify for the UI and Jest for testing.
Here is my parent component, containing the edit-user-details component:
<template>
<v-container>
<v-form v-model="valid">
<v-card>
<v-card-text>
<edit-user-details :user="user"></edit-user-details>
</v-card-text>
<v-card-actions>
<v-btn :disabled="!valid" #click="save()">Save</v-btn>
<v-btn #click="cancel()">Cancel</v-btn>
</v-card-actions>
</v-card>
</v-form>
</v-container>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "edit-user",
components: {},
data: () => ({
user: {},
valid: false
}),
methods: {
save() {
...
},
cancel() {
...}
}
}
}
</script>
This is a part of the edit-user-details component:
<template>
<v-container>
<v-text-field
v-model="user.userName"
label="Username*"
required
:rules="[v => !!v || 'Please, enter a user name.']"
></v-text-field>
...
</v-container>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: "edit-user-details",
props: {
user: {
type: Object,
default: () => ({})
}
}
}
</script>
And here we have my test:
import { mount, createLocalVue } from '#vue/test-utils'
import EditUser from '../../src/views/EditUser'
import Vuetify from 'vuetify';
import EditUserDetails from '../../src/components/EditUserDetails'
describe('Edited user data ', () => {
it('can be saved if valid', () => {
const localVue = createLocalVue();
localVue.use(Vuetify)
localVue.use(EditUserDetails)
const wrapper = mount(EditUser, {
localVue: localVue
});
})
})
The test is green because it has no assert. The main issue is, that I get this error: [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: - did you register the component correctly? For recursive components, make sure to provide the "name" option.
So my question is: How can I test a component containing other components written by me?
Thank you in advance for your help.
instead of mount, use shallowMount.
Like mount, it creates a Wrapper that contains the mounted and
rendered Vue component, but with stubbed child components.
https://vue-test-utils.vuejs.org/api/#shallowmount
I haven’t tried this together with createLocalVue(), but I hope it'll help:
import Vuetify from 'vuetify'
const vuetify = new Vuetify()
const wrapper = mount(Component, { ..., vuetify })
I am testing my App.vue , and I am stuck with a Vuex error on getters...
I guess it's related to a badly define getters property , but I don't see how to solve it ..
feeedback welcome
Console.log
ERROR LOG: '[vuex] unknown getter: getLists'
App.vue
✗ calls store action addShoppingList when a click event is fired from the plus-sign icon
AssertionError: expected false to equal true
at Context.<anonymous> (webpack:///test/unit/specs/App.spec.js:33:50 <- index.js:24490:51)
App.spec.js
import App from '#/App'
import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'
import sinon from 'sinon'
import { mount } from 'avoriaz'
Vue.use(Vuex)
describe('App.vue', () => {
let actions
let getters
let store
beforeEach(() => {
actions = {
addShoppingList: sinon.stub(),
populateShoppingLists: sinon.stub()
}
getters = {
shoppinglists: () => 'getLists'
}
store = new Vuex.Store({
state: {},
actions,
getters
})
})
it('calls store action addShoppingList when a click event is fired from the plus-sign icon', (done) => {
const wrapper = mount(App, { store })
wrapper.find('a')[0].trigger('click')
wrapper.vm.$nextTick(() => {
expect(actions.createShoppingList.calledOnce).to.equal(true)
done()
})
})
App.vue
<template>
<div id="app" class="container">
<ul class="nav nav-tabs" role="tablist">
<li :class="index===shoppinglists.length-1 ? 'active' : ''" v-for="(list, index) in shoppinglists" :key="list.id" role="presentation">
<shopping-list-title-component :id="list.id" :title="list.title"></shopping-list-title-component>
</li>
<li>
<a href="#" #click="addShoppingList">
<i class="glyphicon glyphicon-plus-sign"></i>
</a>
</li>
</ul>
<div class="tab-content">
<div :class="index===shoppinglists.length-1 ? 'active' : ''" v-for="(list, index) in shoppinglists" :key="list.id" class="tab-pane" role="tabpanel" :id="list.id">
<shopping-list-component :id="list.id" :title="list.title" :items="list.items"></shopping-list-component>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import ShoppingListComponent from './components/ShoppingListComponent'
import ShoppingListTitleComponent from './components/ShoppingListTitleComponent'
import store from './vuex/store'
import { mapGetters, mapActions } from 'vuex'
import _ from 'underscore'
export default {
components: {
ShoppingListComponent,
ShoppingListTitleComponent
},
computed: {
...mapGetters({ shoppinglists: 'getLists' })
},
methods: _.extend({}, mapActions(['populateShoppingLists', 'createShoppingList']), {
addShoppingList () {
let list = { title: 'New Shopping List', items: [] }
this.createShoppingList(list)
}
}),
store,
mounted: function () {
this.$nextTick(function () {
this.populateShoppingLists()
})
}
}
</script>
UPDATE
here are my getters.js anf store.js files
store.js is imported in App.vue
store.js
import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'
import getters from './getters' // import getters !
import actions from './actions'
import mutations from './mutations'
Vue.use(Vuex)
const state = {
shoppinglists: []
}
export default new Vuex.Store({
state,
mutations,
getters,
actions
})
getters.js
import _ from 'underscore'
export default {
getLists: state => state.shoppinglists,
getListById: (state, id) => {
return _.findWhere(state.shoppinglists, { id: id })
}
}
You don't define a getLists getter in your store. You're defining a shoppinglists getter that returns 'getLists'.
You need to either change your mapGetters line to be:
...mapGetters(['shoppinglists'])
Or change the name of the getter to getLists:
getters = {
getLists: () => 'getLists'
}
(Although I'm not sure if you are really meaning to return a string value in that getter or not)
#thanksd put me on tracks... see my comment
so I need to define the getters in my Vur.spec.js as following
getters = {
getLists: () => {
// console.log('WE ARE S TEST')
state => state.shoppinglists
}
}
I am working on an app which was created with the Vue loader's webpack template.
I included testing with Karma as an option when creating the project, so it was all set up and I haven't changed any of the config.
The app is a Github user lookup which currently consists of three components; App.vue, Stats.vue and UserForm.vue. The stats and form components are children of the containing app component.
Here is App.vue:
<template>
<div id="app">
<user-form
v-model="inputValue"
#go="submit"
:input-value="inputValue"
></user-form>
<stats
:username="username"
:avatar="avatar"
:fave-lang="faveLang"
:followers="followers"
></stats>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import Vue from 'vue'
import axios from 'axios'
import VueAxios from 'vue-axios'
import _ from 'lodash'
import UserForm from './components/UserForm'
import Stats from './components/Stats'
Vue.use(VueAxios, axios)
export default {
name: 'app',
components: {
UserForm,
Stats
},
data () {
return {
inputValue: '',
username: '',
avatar: '',
followers: [],
faveLang: '',
urlBase: 'https://api.github.com/users'
}
},
methods: {
submit () {
if (this.inputValue) {
const api = `${this.urlBase}/${this.inputValue}`
this.fetchUser(api)
}
},
fetchUser (api) {
Vue.axios.get(api).then((response) => {
const { data } = response
this.inputValue = ''
this.username = data.login
this.avatar = data.avatar_url
this.fetchFollowers()
this.fetchFaveLang()
}).catch(error => {
console.warn('ERROR:', error)
})
},
fetchFollowers () {
Vue.axios.get(`${this.urlBase}/${this.username}/followers`).then(followersResponse => {
this.followers = followersResponse.data.map(follower => {
return follower.login
})
})
},
fetchFaveLang () {
Vue.axios.get(`${this.urlBase}/${this.username}/repos`).then(reposResponse => {
const langs = reposResponse.data.map(repo => {
return repo.language
})
// Get most commonly occurring string from array
const faveLang = _.chain(langs).countBy().toPairs().maxBy(_.last).head().value()
if (faveLang !== 'null') {
this.faveLang = faveLang
} else {
this.faveLang = ''
}
})
}
}
}
</script>
<style lang="stylus">
body
background-color goldenrod
</style>
Here is Stats.vue:
<template>
<div class="container">
<h1 class="username" v-if="username">{{username}}</h1>
<img v-if="avatar" :src="avatar" class="avatar">
<h2 v-if="faveLang">Favourite Language: {{faveLang}}</h2>
<h3 v-if="followers.length > 0">Followers ({{followers.length}}):</h3>
<ul v-if="followers.length > 0">
<li v-for="follower in followers">
{{follower}}
</li>
</ul>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
name: 'stats',
props: [
'username',
'avatar',
'faveLang',
'followers'
]
}
</script>
<style lang="stylus" scoped>
h1
font-size 44px
.avatar
height 200px
width 200px
border-radius 10%
.container
display flex
align-items center
flex-flow column
font-family Comic Sans MS
</style>
And here is UserForm.vue:
<template>
<form #submit.prevent="handleSubmit">
<input
class="input"
:value="inputValue"
#input="updateValue($event.target.value)"
type="text"
placeholder="Enter a GitHub username..."
>
<button class="button">Go!</button>
</form>
</template>
<script>
export default {
props: ['inputValue'],
name: 'user-form',
methods: {
updateValue (value) {
this.$emit('input', value)
},
handleSubmit () {
this.$emit('go')
}
}
}
</script>
<style lang="stylus" scoped>
input
width 320px
input,
button
font-size 25px
form
display flex
justify-content center
</style>
I wrote a trivial test for UserForm.vue which test's the outerHTML of the <button>:
import Vue from 'vue'
import UserForm from 'src/components/UserForm'
describe('UserForm.vue', () => {
it('should have a data-attribute in the button outerHTML', () => {
const vm = new Vue({
el: document.createElement('div'),
render: (h) => h(UserForm)
})
expect(vm.$el.querySelector('.button').outerHTML)
.to.include('data-v')
})
})
This works fine; the output when running npm run unit is:
UserForm.vue
✓ should have a data-attribute in the button outerHTML
However, when I tried to write a similarly simple test for Stats.vue based on the documentation, I ran into a problem.
Here is the test:
import Vue from 'vue'
import Stats from 'src/components/Stats'
// Inspect the generated HTML after a state update
it('updates the rendered message when vm.message updates', done => {
const vm = new Vue(Stats).$mount()
vm.username = 'foo'
// wait a "tick" after state change before asserting DOM updates
Vue.nextTick(() => {
expect(vm.$el.querySelector('.username').textContent).toBe('foo')
done()
})
})
and here is the respective error when running npm run unit:
ERROR LOG: '[Vue warn]: Error when rendering root instance: '
✗ updates the rendered message when vm.message updates
undefined is not an object (evaluating '_vm.followers.length')
I have tried the following in an attempt to get the test working:
Change how the vm is created in the Stats test to be the same as the UserForm test - same error is returned
Test individual parts of the component, for example the textContent of a div in the component - same error is returned
Why is the error referring to _vm.followers.length? What is _vm with an underscore in front? How can I get around this issue to be able to successfully test my component?
(Repo with all code: https://github.com/alanbuchanan/vue-github-lookup-2)
Why is the error referring to _vm.followers.length? What is _vm with an underscore in front?
This piece of code is from the render function that Vue compiled your template into. _vm is a placeholder that gets inserted automatically into all Javascript expressions when vue-loader converts the template into a render function during build - it does that to provide access to the component.
When you do this in your template:
{{followers.length}}
The compiled result in the render function for this piece of code will be:
_vm.followers.length
Now, why does the error happen in the first place? Because you have defined a prop followers on your component, but don't provide any data for it - therefore, the prop's value is undefined
Solution: either you provide a default value for the prop:
// Stats.vue
props: {
followers: { default: () => [] }, // function required to return fresh object
// ... other props
}
Or you propvide acual values for the prop:
// in the test:
const vm = new Vue({
...Stats,
propsData: {
followers: [/* ... actual data*/]
}
}).$mount()
I am trying to unit test my reactjs component:
import React from 'react';
import Modal from 'react-modal';
import store from '../../../store'
import lodash from 'lodash'
export class AddToOrder extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {checked: false}
//debugger
}
checkBoxChecked() {
return true
}
render() {
console.log('testing=this.props.id',this.props.id )
return (
<div className="order">
<label>
<input
id={this.props.parent}
checked={this.checkBoxChecked()}
onChange={this.addToOrder.bind(this, this.props)}
type="checkbox"/>
Add to order
</label>
</div>
)
}
}
export default AddToOrder;
Just to get started I am already struggling to assert the checkBoxChecked method:
import React from 'react-native';
import {shallow} from 'enzyme';
import {AddToOrder} from '../app/components/buttons/addtoorder/addtoorder';
import {expect} from 'chai';
import {mount} from 'enzyme';
import jsdom from 'jsdom';
const doc = jsdom.jsdom('<!doctype html><html><body></body></html>')
global.document = doc
global.window = doc.defaultView
let props;
beforeEach(() => {
props = {
cart: {
items: [{
id: 100,
price: 2000,
name:'Docs'
}]
}
};
});
describe('AddToOrder component', () => {
it('should be handling checkboxChecked', () => {
const wrapper = shallow(<AddToOrder {...props.cart} />);
expect(wrapper.checkBoxChecked()).equals(true); //error appears here
});
});
```
How can I unit test a method on the component? This is the error I am getting:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'checked' of undefined
You are almost there. Just change your expect to this:
expect(wrapper.instance().checkBoxChecked()).equals(true);
You can go through this link to know more about testing component methods using enzyme
For those who find the accepted answer as not working, try using .dive() on your shallow wrapper before using .instance():
expect(wrapper.dive().instance().somePrivateMethod()).toEqual(true);
Reference: Testing component methods with enzyme
Extend of previous answer.
If you have connected component (Redux) , try next code :
const store=configureStore();
const context = { store };
const wrapper = shallow(
<MyComponent,
{ context },
);
const inst = wrapper.dive().instance();
inst.myCustomMethod('hello');