Cypress is used for both component- and end-to-end testing. Below there's a few examples for the context of this site. To learn more, the Cypress documentation has it all.
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To write a new component test, you either create a new .tsx
adjacent to the component you want to test or you can use the guide presented yo you when running npm run cypress
which allows you to easily create the skeleton test for an existing component.
If you have a Button.tsx
component, create a file next to it called Button.cy.tsx
which could look like this:
import React from "react";
import { Button } from "./Button";
describe("<Button />", () => {
it("renders", () => {
// see: https://on.cypress.io/mounting-react
cy.mount(<Button className="border-gray-800 m-5">Test button</Button>);
cy.get("button").compareSnapshot("button-element");
});
});
First we use cy.mount
to mount our component under test. Notive how we specify className
and inner text - this is where we arrange our component with fake data that we could assert on later.
In the example above, we also use cy.get
to select the rendered button
element. Cypress has multiple ways to select elements, get
is just one of them (and often not recommended).
At last, we use captureSnapshot
which is a plugin that snaps a photo of the button
element and compares it to a baseline located in the ./cypress-visual-screenshots/baseline/
folder. If there's too many unidentical pixels between the two, it will fail the test.
e2e tests are stored in the ./cypress/e2e
folder and should be named {page}.cy.ts
and located in a relative folder structure that mirrors the page under test.
When running npm run cypress
and selecting e2e testing, we assume you have the NextJS site running at localhost:3000
.
An example test from this time of writing, could look as follows:
describe("signin flow", () => {
it("redirects to a confirmation page on submit of valid email address", () => {
cy.visit("/auth/signin");
cy.get(".chakra-input").type(`test@example.com{enter}`);
cy.url().should("contain", "/auth/verify");
});
});
export {};
First we use cy.visit
to point the browser at the desired page. It appends relative paths to the configured baseUrl
(found in ./cypress.config.ts
).
Cypress will automatically await almost anything you do, but fail if the default timeout is reached.
Then we get the email input field and type our email address. Notice the {enter}
keyword, this will cause Cypress to hit the return key which we expect to submit the form.
We then assert that the URL should contain /auth/verify
. Again the timeout will make sure we are not waiting forever, and the test will fail if we do not manage to get there in a reasonable time.