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jest-cheat-sheet

Table of contents​

Test structure​

describe('makePoniesPink', () => {
beforeAll(() => {
/* Runs before all tests */
})
afterAll(() => {
/* Runs after all tests */
})
beforeEach(() => {
/* Runs before each test */
})
afterEach(() => {
/* Runs after each test */
})

test('make each pony pink', () => {
const actual = fn(['Alice', 'Bob', 'Eve'])
expect(actual).toEqual(['Pink Alice', 'Pink Bob', 'Pink Eve'])
})
})

Matchers​

Using matchers, matchers docs

Basic matchers​

expect(42).toBe(42) // Strict equality (===)
expect(42).not.toBe(3) // Strict equality (!==)
expect([1, 2]).toEqual([1, 2]) // Deep equality
expect({ a: undefined, b: 2 }).toEqual({ b: 2 }) // Deep equality
expect({ a: undefined, b: 2 }).not.toStrictEqual({ b: 2 }) // Strict equality (Jest 23+)

Truthiness​

// Matches anything that an if statement treats as true (true, 1, 'hello', {}, [], 5.3)
expect('foo').toBeTruthy()
// Matches anything that an if statement treats as false (false, 0, '', null, undefined, NaN)
expect('').toBeFalsy()
// Matches only null
expect(null).toBeNull()
// Matches only undefined
expect(undefined).toBeUndefined()
// The opposite of toBeUndefined
expect(7).toBeDefined()
// Matches true or false
expect(true).toEqual(expect.any(Boolean))

Numbers​

expect(2).toBeGreaterThan(1)
expect(1).toBeGreaterThanOrEqual(1)
expect(1).toBeLessThan(2)
expect(1).toBeLessThanOrEqual(1)
expect(0.2 + 0.1).toBeCloseTo(0.3, 5)
expect(NaN).toEqual(expect.any(Number))

Strings​

expect('long string').toMatch('str')
expect('string').toEqual(expect.any(String))
expect('coffee').toMatch(/ff/)
expect('pizza').not.toMatch('coffee')
expect(['pizza', 'coffee']).toEqual([expect.stringContaining('zz'), expect.stringMatching(/ff/)])

Arrays​

expect([]).toEqual(expect.any(Array))
expect(['Alice', 'Bob', 'Eve']).toHaveLength(3)
expect(['Alice', 'Bob', 'Eve']).toContain('Alice')
expect([{ a: 1 }, { a: 2 }]).toContainEqual({ a: 1 })
expect(['Alice', 'Bob', 'Eve']).toEqual(expect.arrayContaining(['Alice', 'Bob']))

Objects​

expect({ a: 1 }).toHaveProperty('a')
expect({ a: 1 }).toHaveProperty('a', 1)
expect({ a: { b: 1 } }).toHaveProperty('a.b')
expect({ a: 1, b: 2 }).toMatchObject({ a: 1 })
expect({ a: 1, b: 2 }).toMatchObject({
a: expect.any(Number),
b: expect.any(Number),
})
expect([{ a: 1 }, { b: 2 }]).toEqual([
expect.objectContaining({ a: expect.any(Number) }),
expect.anything(),
])

Exceptions​

// const fn = () => { throw new Error('Out of cheese!') }
expect(fn).toThrow()
expect(fn).toThrow('Out of cheese')
expect(fn).toThrowErrorMatchingSnapshot()

Snapshots​

expect(node).toMatchSnapshot()
// Jest 23+
expect(user).toMatchSnapshot({
date: expect.any(Date),
})
expect(user).toMatchInlineSnapshot()

Mock functions​

// const fn = jest.fn()
// const fn = jest.fn().mockName('Unicorn') -- named mock, Jest 22+
expect(fn).toBeCalled() // Function was called
expect(fn).not.toBeCalled() // Function was *not* called
expect(fn).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1) // Function was called only once
expect(fn).toBeCalledWith(arg1, arg2) // Any of calls was with these arguments
expect(fn).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith(arg1, arg2) // Last call was with these arguments
expect(fn).toHaveBeenNthCalledWith(callNumber, args) // Nth call was with these arguments (Jest 23+)
expect(fn).toHaveReturnedTimes(2) // Function was returned without throwing an error (Jest 23+)
expect(fn).toHaveReturnedWith(value) // Function returned a value (Jest 23+)
expect(fn).toHaveLastReturnedWith(value) // Last function call returned a value (Jest 23+)
expect(fn).toHaveNthReturnedWith(value) // Nth function call returned a value (Jest 23+)
expect(fn.mock.calls).toEqual([
['first', 'call', 'args'],
['second', 'call', 'args'],
]) // Multiple calls
expect(fn.mock.calls[0][0]).toBe(2) // fn.mock.calls[0][0] β€” the first argument of the first call
  • toBeCalled β†’ toHaveBeenCalled
  • toBeCalledWith β†’ toHaveBeenCalledWith
  • lastCalledWith β†’ toHaveBeenLastCalledWith
  • nthCalledWith β†’ toHaveBeenNthCalledWith
  • toReturnTimes β†’ toHaveReturnedTimes
  • toReturnWith β†’ toHaveReturnedWith
  • lastReturnedWithΒ β†’ toHaveLastReturnedWith
  • nthReturnedWith β†’Β toHaveNthReturnedWith

Misc​

expect(new A()).toBeInstanceOf(A)
expect(() => {}).toEqual(expect.any(Function))
expect('pizza').toEqual(expect.anything())

Promise matchers (Jest 20+)​

test('resolve to lemon', () => {
expect.assertions(1)
// Make sure to add a return statement
return expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.toBe('lemon')
return expect(Promise.reject('octopus')).rejects.toBeDefined()
return expect(Promise.reject(Error('pizza'))).rejects.toThrow()
})

Or with async/await:

test('resolve to lemon', async () => {
expect.assertions(2)
await expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.toBe('lemon')
await expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.not.toBe('octopus')
})

resolves docs

Async tests​

See more examples in Jest docs.

It’s a good practice to specify a number of expected assertions in async tests, so the test will fail if your assertions weren’t called at all.

test('async test', () => {
expect.assertions(3) // Exactly three assertions are called during a test
// OR
expect.hasAssertions() // At least one assertion is called during a test

// Your async tests
})

You can also do this per file, outside any describe and test:

beforeEach(expect.hasAssertions)

This will verify the presence of at least one assertion per test case. It also plays nice with more specific expect.assertions(3) declarations.

In addition, you can enforce it globally, across all test files (instead of having to repeat per file) by adding the exact same line into one of the scripts referenced by the setupFilesAfterEnv configuration option. (For example, setupTests.ts and that is referenced via a setupFilesAfterEnv: ['<rootDir>/setupTests.ts'] entry in jest.config.ts.)

async/await​

test('async test', async () => {
expect.assertions(1)
const result = await runAsyncOperation()
expect(result).toBe(true)
})

Promises​

Return a Promise from your test:

test('async test', () => {
expect.assertions(1)
return runAsyncOperation().then((result) => {
expect(result).toBe(true)
})
})

done()Β callback​

Wrap your assertions in try/catch block, otherwise Jest will ignore failures:

test('async test', (done) => {
expect.assertions(1)
runAsyncOperation()
setTimeout(() => {
try {
const result = getAsyncOperationResult()
expect(result).toBe(true)
done()
} catch (err) {
done.fail(err)
}
})
})

Mocks​

Mock functions​

test('call the callback', () => {
const callback = jest.fn()
fn(callback)
expect(callback).toBeCalled()
expect(callback.mock.calls[0][1].baz).toBe('pizza') // Second argument of the first call
// Match the first and the last arguments but ignore the second argument
expect(callback).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('meal', expect.anything(), 'margarita')
})

You can also use snapshots:

test('call the callback', () => {
const callback = jest.fn().mockName('Unicorn') // mockName is available in Jest 22+
fn(callback)
expect(callback).toMatchSnapshot()
// ->
// [MockFunction Unicorn] {
// "calls": Array [
// ...
})

And pass an implementation to jest.fn function:

const callback = jest.fn(() => true)

Mock functions docs

Returning, resolving and rejecting values​

Your mocks can return values:

const callback = jest.fn().mockReturnValue(true)
const callbackOnce = jest.fn().mockReturnValueOnce(true)

Or resolve values:

const promise = jest.fn().mockResolvedValue(true)
const promiseOnce = jest.fn().mockResolvedValueOnce(true)

They can even reject values:

const failedPromise = jest.fn().mockRejectedValue('Error')
const failedPromiseOnce = jest.fn().mockRejectedValueOnce('Error')

You can even combine these:

const callback = jest.fn().mockReturnValueOnce(false).mockReturnValue(true)

// ->
// call 1: false
// call 2+: true

Mock modules using jest.mock method​

jest.mock('lodash/memoize', () => (a) => a) // The original lodash/memoize should exist
jest.mock('lodash/memoize', () => (a) => a, { virtual: true }) // The original lodash/memoize isn’t required

jest.mock docs

[!NOTE]
When using babel-jest, calls to jest.mock will automatically be hoisted to the top of the code block. Use jest.doMock if you want to explicitly avoid this behavior.

Mock modules using a mock file​

  1. Create a file like __mocks__/lodash/memoize.js:

    module.exports = (a) => a
  2. Add to your test:

    jest.mock('lodash/memoize')

[!NOTE]
When using babel-jest, calls to jest.mock will automatically be hoisted to the top of the code block. Use jest.doMock if you want to explicitly avoid this behavior.

Manual mocks docs

Mock object methods​

const spy = jest.spyOn(console, 'log').mockImplementation(() => {})
expect(console.log.mock.calls).toEqual([['dope'], ['nope']])
spy.mockRestore()
const spy = jest.spyOn(ajax, 'request').mockImplementation(() => Promise.resolve({ success: true }))
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalled()
spy.mockRestore()

Mock getters and setters (Jest 22.1.0+)​

const location = {}
const getTitle = jest.spyOn(location, 'title', 'get').mockImplementation(() => 'pizza')
const setTitle = jest.spyOn(location, 'title', 'set').mockImplementation(() => {})

Mock getters and setters​

const getTitle = jest.fn(() => 'pizza')
const setTitle = jest.fn()
const location = {}
Object.defineProperty(location, 'title', {
get: getTitle,
set: setTitle,
})

Clearing and restoring mocks​

For one mock:

fn.mockClear() // Clears mock usage date (fn.mock.calls, fn.mock.instances)
fn.mockReset() // Clears and removes any mocked return values or implementations
fn.mockRestore() // Resets and restores the initial implementation

[!NOTE]
The mockRestoreΒ works only with mocks created by jest.spyOn.

For all mocks:

jest.clearAllMocks()
jest.resetAllMocks()
jest.restoreAllMocks()

Accessing the original module when using mocks​

jest.mock('fs')
const fs = require('fs') // Mocked module
const fs = require.requireActual('fs') // Original module

Timer mocks​

Write synchronous test for code that uses native timer functions (setTimeout, setInterval, clearTimeout, clearInterval).

// Enable fake timers
jest.useFakeTimers()

test('kill the time', () => {
const callback = jest.fn()

// Run some code that uses setTimeout or setInterval
const actual = someFunctionThatUseTimers(callback)

// Fast-forward until all timers have been executed
jest.runAllTimers()

// Check the results synchronously
expect(callback).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1)
})

Or adjust timers by time with advanceTimersByTime():

// Enable fake timers
jest.useFakeTimers()

test('kill the time', () => {
const callback = jest.fn()

// Run some code that uses setTimeout or setInterval
const actual = someFunctionThatUseTimers(callback)

// Fast-forward for 250 ms
jest.advanceTimersByTime(250)

// Check the results synchronously
expect(callback).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1)
})

Use jest.runOnlyPendingTimers() for special cases.

[!NOTE]
You should call jest.useFakeTimers() in your test case to use other fake timer methods.

Data-driven tests (Jest 23+)​

Run the same test with different data:

test.each([
[1, 1, 2],
[1, 2, 3],
[2, 1, 3],
])('.add(%s, %s)', (a, b, expected) => {
expect(a + b).toBe(expected)
})

Or the same using template literals:

test.each`
a | b | expected
${1} | ${1} | ${2}
${1} | ${2} | ${3}
${2} | ${1} | ${3}
`('returns $expected when $a is added $b', ({ a, b, expected }) => {
expect(a + b).toBe(expected)
})

Or on describe level:

describe.each([['mobile'], ['tablet'], ['desktop']])('checkout flow on %s', (viewport) => {
test('displays success page', () => {
//
})
})

describe.each() docs, test.each() docs,

Skipping tests​

Don’t run these tests:

describe.skip('makePoniesPink'...
tests.skip('make each pony pink'...

Run only these tests:

describe.only('makePoniesPink'...
tests.only('make each pony pink'...

Testing modules with side effects​

Node.js and Jest will cache modules you require. To test modules with side effects you’ll need to reset the module registry between tests:

const modulePath = '../module-to-test'

afterEach(() => {
jest.resetModules()
})

test('first test', () => {
// Prepare conditions for the first test
const result = require(modulePath)
expect(result).toMatchSnapshot()
})

test('second text', () => {
// Prepare conditions for the second test
const fn = () => require(modulePath)
expect(fn).toThrow()
})

Usage with Babel and TypeScript​

Add babel-jest or ts-jest. Check their docs for installation instructions.

Resources​


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Contributing​

Improvements are welcome! Open an issue or send a pull request.

Sponsoring​

This software has been developed with lots of coffee, buy me one more cup to keep it going.

Author and license​

Artem Sapegin, a frontend engineer at Stage+ and the creator of React Styleguidist. I also write about frontend at my blog.

CC0 1.0 Universal license, see the included License.md file.