Example

Preact Testing Library works with both Preact Hooks and Classes. Your tests will be the same however you write your components.

Component

function HiddenMessage({ children }) {
const [showMessage, setShowMessage] = useState(false)
return (
<div>
<label htmlFor="toggle">Show Message</label>
<input
id="toggle"
type="checkbox"
onChange={(e) => setShowMessage(e.target.checked)}
checked={showMessage}
/>
{showMessage ? children : null}
</div>
)
}

Test

// NOTE: jest-dom adds handy assertions to Jest and it is recommended, but not required.
import '@testing-library/jest-dom/extend-expect'
import { h } from 'preact'
import { render, fireEvent } from '@testing-library/preact'
import HiddenMessage from '../hidden-message'
test('shows the children when the checkbox is checked', () => {
const testMessage = 'Test Message'
const { queryByText, getByLabelText, getByText } = render(
<HiddenMessage>{testMessage}</HiddenMessage>
)
// query* functions will return the element or null if it cannot be found.
// get* functions will return the element or throw an error if it cannot be found.
expect(queryByText(testMessage)).toBeNull()
// The queries can accept a regex to make your selectors more resilient to content tweaks and changes.
fireEvent.click(getByLabelText(/show/i))
// .toBeInTheDocument() is an assertion that comes from jest-dom.
// Otherwise you could use .toBeDefined().
expect(getByText(testMessage)).toBeInTheDocument()
})
Last updated on by Matan Borenkraout