Simple and complete React hooks testing utilities that encourage good testing practices.
Read The Docs
As part of the changes for React 18, it has been decided that the renderHook
API provided by this
library will instead be included as official additions to both react-testing-library
(PR) and
react-native-testing-library
(PR) with the intention being
to provide a more cohesive and consistent implementation for our users.
Please be patient as we finalise these changes in the respective testing libraries.
In the mean time you can install @testing-library/react@^13.1
- The problem
- The solution
- When to use this library
- When not to use this library
- Example
- Installation
- API
- Contributors
- Issues
- LICENSE
You're writing an awesome custom hook and you want to test it, but as soon as you call it you see the following error:
Invariant Violation: Hooks can only be called inside the body of a function component.
You don't really want to write a component solely for testing this hook and have to work out how you were going to trigger all the various ways the hook can be updated, especially given the complexities of how you've wired the whole thing together.
The react-hooks-testing-library
allows you to create a simple test harness for React hooks that
handles running them within the body of a function component, as well as providing various useful
utility functions for updating the inputs and retrieving the outputs of your amazing custom hook.
This library aims to provide a testing experience as close as possible to natively using your hook
from within a real component.
Using this library, you do not have to concern yourself with how to construct, render or interact with the react component in order to test your hook. You can just use the hook directly and assert the results.
- You're writing a library with one or more custom hooks that are not directly tied to a component
- You have a complex hook that is difficult to test through component interactions
- Your hook is defined alongside a component and is only used there
- Your hook is easy to test by just testing the components using it
import { useState, useCallback } from 'react'
function useCounter() {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0)
const increment = useCallback(() => setCount((x) => x + 1), [])
return { count, increment }
}
export default useCounter
import { renderHook, act } from '@testing-library/react-hooks'
import useCounter from './useCounter'
test('should increment counter', () => {
const { result } = renderHook(() => useCounter())
act(() => {
result.current.increment()
})
expect(result.current.count).toBe(1)
})
More advanced usage can be found in the documentation.
npm install --save-dev @testing-library/react-hooks
react-hooks-testing-library
does not come bundled with a version of
react
to allow you to install the specific version you want
to test against. It also does not come installed with a specific renderer, we currently support
react-test-renderer
and
react-dom
. You only need to install one of them,
however, if you do have both installed, we will use react-test-renderer
as the default. For more
information see the
installation docs. Generally, the
installed versions for react
and the selected renderer should have matching versions:
npm install react@^16.9.0
npm install --save-dev react-test-renderer@^16.9.0
NOTE: The minimum supported version of
react
,react-test-renderer
andreact-dom
is^16.9.0
.
See the API reference.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
Looking to contribute? Look for the Good First Issue label.
Please file an issue for bugs, missing documentation, or unexpected behavior.
Please file an issue to suggest new features. Vote on feature requests by adding a π. This helps maintainers prioritize what to work on.
For questions related to using the library, you can raise issue here, or visit a support community:
MIT