API
React Testing Library re-exports everything from DOM Testing Library as well
as these methods:
render
Render into a container which is appended to document.body.
render Options
You won't often need to specify options, but if you ever do, here are the
available options which you could provide as a second argument to render.
container
By default, React Testing Library will create a div and append that div to
the document.body and this is where your React component will be rendered. If
you provide your own HTMLElement container via this option, it will not be
appended to the document.body automatically.
For example: If you are unit testing a tablebody element, it cannot be a child
of a div. In this case, you can specify a table as the render container.
baseElement
If the container is specified, then this defaults to that, otherwise this
defaults to document.body. This is used as the base element for the queries as
well as what is printed when you use debug().
hydrate
If hydrate is set to true, then it will render with ReactDOM.hydrate. This may be useful if you are using server-side rendering and use ReactDOM.hydrate to mount your components.
wrapper
Pass a React Component as the wrapper option to have it rendered around the
inner element. This is most useful for creating reusable custom render functions
for common data providers. See setup for examples.
queries
Queries to bind. Overrides the default set from DOM Testing Library unless
merged.
See helpers for guidance on using utility functions to create custom queries.
Custom queries can also be added globally by following the custom render guide.
render Result
The render method returns an object that has a few properties:
...queries
The most important feature of render is that the queries from
DOM Testing Library are automatically returned with their
first argument bound to the baseElement, which defaults to
document.body.
See Queries for a complete list.
Example
container
The containing DOM node of your rendered React Element (rendered using
ReactDOM.render). It's a div. This is a regular DOM node, so you can call
container.querySelector etc. to inspect the children.
Tip: To get the root element of your rendered element, use
container.firstChild.NOTE: When that root element is a React Fragment,
container.firstChildwill only get the first child of that Fragment, not the Fragment itself.
๐จ If you find yourself using
containerto query for rendered elements then you should reconsider! The other queries are designed to be more resilient to changes that will be made to the component you're testing. Avoid usingcontainerto query for elements!
baseElement
The containing DOM node where your React Element is rendered in the container.
If you don't specify the baseElement in the options of render, it will
default to document.body.
This is useful when the component you want to test renders something outside the container div, e.g. when you want to snapshot test your portal component which renders its HTML directly in the body.
Note: the queries returned by the
renderlooks into baseElement, so you can use queries to test your portal component without the baseElement.
debug
NOTE: It's recommended to use
screen.debuginstead.
This method is a shortcut for console.log(prettyDOM(baseElement)).
This is a simple wrapper around prettyDOM which is also exposed and comes from
DOM Testing Library.
rerender
It'd probably be better if you test the component that's doing the prop updating to ensure that the props are being updated correctly (see the Guiding Principles section). That said, if you'd prefer to update the props of a rendered component in your test, this function can be used to update props of the rendered component.
unmount
This will cause the rendered component to be unmounted. This is useful for testing what happens when your component is removed from the page (like testing that you don't leave event handlers hanging around causing memory leaks).
This method is a pretty small abstraction over
ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode
asFragment
Returns a DocumentFragment of your rendered component. This can be useful if
you need to avoid live bindings and see how your component reacts to events.
cleanup
Unmounts React trees that were mounted with render.
Please note that this is done automatically if the testing framework you're using supports the
afterEachglobal and it is injected to your testing environment (like mocha, Jest, and Jasmine). If not, you will need to do manual cleanups after each test.
For example, if you're using the ava testing
framework, then you would need to use the test.afterEach hook like so:
Failing to call cleanup when you've called render could result in a memory
leak and tests which are not "idempotent" (which can lead to difficult to debug
errors in your tests).
act
This is a light wrapper around the
react-dom/test-utils act function.
All it does is forward all arguments to the act function if your version of
react supports act. It is recommended to use the import from
@testing-library/react over react-dom/test-utils for consistency reasons.