Skip to content

pngwn/svelte-test

Repository files navigation

svelte-test

Transforms and examples for testing Svelte components.

There are details on the transforms below. You can view example test setups in /examples/.



svelte-test/transform

Install jest and svelte-test.

yarn add --dev jest svelte-test # or npm i -D jest

In your jest config file add svelte-test/transform as a transform for Svelte components (whatever file extension you use). Add any preprocessors to globals.svelte.preprocess and any custom compiler options to globals.svelte.compilerOptions. Your Jest config file will need to be a javascript file.

The jest.config.js should look something like this:

module.exports = {
  testPathIgnorePatterns: ['/node_modules/', '/cypress/'],
  transform: {
    '^.+\\.svelte$': 'svelte-test/transform',
  },
  globals: {
    svelte: {
      preprocess: preprocess(),
      compilerOptions: {
        accessors: true,
      },
    },
  },
};

babel?

You will probably need to install babel as well, to save you a lifetime of hell I will provide basic instructions.

Install babel-jest, @babel/core, and @babel/preset-env.

yarn add --dev babel-jest @babel/core @babel/preset-env #or npm i ...

Create a babel.config.js that looks like this:

module.exports = function(api) {
  api.cache(true);

  return {
    presets: [
      [
        '@babel/preset-env',
        {
          targets: {
            node: 'current',
          },
        },
      ],
    ],
  };
};

success!

You can now do this in your tests:

import App from '../App.svelte';

test('The component should exist', () => {
  const component = new App({ target: document.body });

  expect(component).toBeTruthy();
});

You may now go on with your life.

svelte-test/require

If you are not using jest you can still hook into node requires and get back a real, genuine, compiled component. What you do with that component is your business.

Install require-extension-hooks and svelte-test:

yarn add --dev require-extension-hooks svelte-test # or npm i ...

Wherever you are doing your magic, import require-extension-hooks and svelte-test/require.

const hooks = require('require-extension-hooks');
const svelte = require('svelte-test/require');

You need to pass the svelte() function the absolute path to your preprocessors as the first argument and any compiler options as the second argument, I haven't completely thought through the API so this may change in the future. You can then push the svelte function as a require hook for your component file extension like so:

const hooks = require('require-extension-hooks');
const svelte = require('svelte-test/require');
const { join } = require('path');

const preprocessors = join(__dirname, './less.js');
const compilerOptions = { accessors: true };

const extensionHook = svelte(preprocessors, compilerOptions);

hooks('.svelte').push(extensionHook);

// You can just require it
const App = require('./App.svelte');

// This is now a constructor function as expected.
const app = new App(options);

About

Testing utilities for Svelte

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published