jest-when-xt
A fork from @timkindberg's jest-when.
An extended, sugary way to mock return values for specific arguments only
Features
jest-when-xt
allows you to use a set of the original
Jest mock functions in order to train
your mocks only based on parameters your mocked function is called with.An example statement would be as follows:
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
The trained mock function
fn
will now behave as follows -- assumed no other trainings took place:- return
yay!
if called with1
as first parameter - return
undefined
if called with any other first parameter than1
For extended usage see the examples below.
The supported set of mock functions is:
mockReturnValue
mockReturnValueOnce
mockResolvedValue
mockResolvedValueOnce
mockRejectedValue
mockRejectedValueOnce
Usage
Installation
npm i --save-dev jest-when-xt
Basic usage:
import { when } from 'jest-when-xt'
const fn = jest.fn()
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
Supports chaining of mock trainings:
when(fn)
.calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
.calledWith(2).mockReturnValue('nay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(2)).toEqual('nay!')
Thanks to @fkloes.when(fn)
.calledWith(1)
.mockReturnValueOnce('yay!')
.mockReturnValue('nay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('nay!')
Thanks to @danielhusar.Supports replacement of mock trainings:
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('yay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('yay!')
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('nay!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('nay!')
This replacement of the training does only happen for mock functions not ending in *Once
.
Trainings like mockReturnValueOnce
are removed after a matching function call anyway.Thanks to @fkloes.
Supports multiple args with partial argument matching:
when(fn).calledWith(1, true).mockReturnValue('yay!')
expect(fn(1, true)).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toEqual('yay!')
Supports training for single calls
when(fn).calledWith(1, true, 'foo').mockReturnValueOnce('yay!')
when(fn).calledWith(1, true, 'foo').mockReturnValueOnce('nay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toEqual('yay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toEqual('nay!')
expect(fn(1, true, 'foo')).toBeUndefined()
Supports Promises, both resolved and rejected
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockResolvedValue('yay!')
when(fn).calledWith(2).mockResolvedValueOnce('nay!')
await expect(fn(1)).resolves.toEqual('yay!')
await expect(fn(1)).resolves.toEqual('yay!')
await expect(fn(2)).resolves.toEqual('nay!')
expect(await fn(2)).toBeUndefined()
when(fn).calledWith(3).mockRejectedValue(new Error('oh no!'))
when(fn).calledWith(4).mockRejectedValueOnce(new Error('oh no, an error again!'))
await expect(fn(3)).rejects.toThrow('oh no!')
await expect(fn(3)).rejects.toThrow('oh no!')
await expect(fn(4)).rejects.toThrow('oh no, an error again!')
expect(await fn(4)).toBeUndefined()
Supports jest matchers:
when(fn).calledWith(
expect.anything(),
expect.any(Number),
expect.arrayContaining(false)
).mockReturnValue('yay!')
const result = fn('whatever', 100, [true, false])
expect(result).toEqual('yay!')
Supports compound declarations:
when(fn).calledWith(1).mockReturnValue('no')
when(fn).calledWith(2).mockReturnValue('way?')
when(fn).calledWith(3).mockReturnValue('yes')
when(fn).calledWith(4).mockReturnValue('way!')
expect(fn(1)).toEqual('no')
expect(fn(2)).toEqual('way?')
expect(fn(3)).toEqual('yes')
expect(fn(4)).toEqual('way!')
expect(fn(5)).toEqual(undefined)
Assert the args:
UseexpectCalledWith
instead to run an assertion that the fn
was called with the provided
args. Your test will fail if the jest mock function is ever called without those exact
expectCalledWith
params.Disclaimer: This won't really work very well with compound declarations, because one of them will always fail, and throw an assertion error.
when(fn).expectCalledWith(1).mockReturnValue('x')
fn(2); // Will throw a helpful jest assertion error with args diff
How to contribute
- File a PR with the changes
- Make sure to bump the version (please stick to Semantic Versioning) and update the
CHANGELOG.md
Contributors (in order of contribution)
- @timkindberg (original author)
- @fkloes
- @danielhusar