From testing-library/dom-testing-library#107:
[...] it is becoming apparent the need to express user actions on a web page using a higher-level abstraction than
fireEvent
user-event
tries to simulate the real events that would happen in the browser
as the user interacts with it. For example userEvent.click(checkbox)
would
change the state of the checkbox.
The library is still a work in progress and any help is appreciated.
- Installation
- API
click(element, eventInit, options)
dblClick(element, eventInit, options)
type(element, text, [options])
keyboard(text, options)
upload(element, file, [{ clickInit, changeInit }], [options])
clear(element)
selectOptions(element, values)
deselectOptions(element, values)
tab({shift, focusTrap})
hover(element)
unhover(element)
paste(element, text, eventInit, options)
specialChars
- Issues
- Contributors β¨
- LICENSE
With NPM:
npm install @testing-library/user-event @testing-library/dom --save-dev
With Yarn:
yarn add @testing-library/user-event @testing-library/dom --dev
Now simply import it in your tests:
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
// or
const {default: userEvent} = require('@testing-library/user-event')
Note: All userEvent methods are synchronous with one exception: when delay
with userEvent.type
as described below). We also discourage using userEvent
inside before/after
blocks at all, for important reasons described in
"Avoid Nesting When You're Testing".
Clicks element
, depending on what element
is it can have different side
effects.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('click', () => {
render(
<div>
<label htmlFor="checkbox">Check</label>
<input id="checkbox" type="checkbox" />
</div>,
)
userEvent.click(screen.getByText('Check'))
expect(screen.getByLabelText('Check')).toBeChecked()
})
You can also ctrlClick / shiftClick etc with
userEvent.click(elem, {ctrlKey: true, shiftKey: true})
See the
MouseEvent
constructor documentation for more options.
Note that click
will trigger hover events before clicking. To disable this,
set the skipHover
option to true
. Also note that trying to click an element
with pointer-events
being set to "none"
(i.e. unclickable) will throw an error.
Clicks element
twice, depending on what element
is it can have different
side effects.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('double click', () => {
const onChange = jest.fn()
render(<input type="checkbox" onChange={onChange} />)
const checkbox = screen.getByRole('checkbox')
userEvent.dblClick(checkbox)
expect(onChange).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2)
expect(checkbox).not.toBeChecked()
})
Writes text
inside an <input>
or a <textarea>
.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('type', () => {
render(<textarea />)
userEvent.type(screen.getByRole('textbox'), 'Hello,{enter}World!')
expect(screen.getByRole('textbox')).toHaveValue('Hello,\nWorld!')
})
options.delay
is the number of milliseconds that pass between two characters
are typed. By default it's 0. You can use this option if your component has a
different behavior for fast or slow users. If you do this, you need to make sure
to await
!
type
will click the element before typing. To disable this, set the
skipClick
option to true
.
The following special character strings are supported:
Text string | Key | Modifier | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
{enter} |
Enter | N/A | Will insert a newline character (<textarea /> only). |
{space} |
' ' |
N/A | |
{esc} |
Escape | N/A | |
{backspace} |
Backspace | N/A | Will delete the previous character (or the characters within the selectedRange , see example below). |
{del} |
Delete | N/A | Will delete the next character (or the characters within the selectedRange , see example below) |
{selectall} |
N/A | N/A | Selects all the text of the element. Note that this will only work for elements that support selection ranges (so, not email , password , number , among others) |
{arrowleft} |
ArrowLeft | N/A | |
{arrowright} |
ArrowRight | N/A | |
{arrowup} |
ArrowUp | N/A | |
{arrowdown} |
ArrowDown | N/A | |
{home} |
Home | N/A | |
{end} |
End | N/A | |
{shift} |
Shift | shiftKey |
Does not capitalize following characters. |
{ctrl} |
Control | ctrlKey |
|
{alt} |
Alt | altKey |
|
{meta} |
OS | metaKey |
|
{capslock} |
CapsLock | modifierCapsLock |
Fires both keydown and keyup when used (simulates a user clicking their "Caps Lock" button to enable caps lock). |
A note about modifiers: Modifier keys (
{shift}
,{ctrl}
,{alt}
,{meta}
) will activate their corresponding event modifiers for the duration of type command or until they are closed (via{/shift}
,{/ctrl}
, etc.). If they are not closed explicitly, then events will be fired to close them automatically (to disable this, set theskipAutoClose
option totrue
).
We take the same stance as Cypress in that we do not simulate the behavior that happens with modifier key combinations as different operating systems function differently in this regard.
An example of an usage with a selection range:
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('delete characters within the selectedRange', () => {
render(
<div>
<label htmlFor="my-input">Example:</label>
<input id="my-input" type="text" value="This is a bad example" />
</div>,
)
const input = screen.getByLabelText(/example/i)
input.setSelectionRange(10, 13)
userEvent.type(input, '{backspace}good')
expect(input).toHaveValue('This is a good example')
})
The following is an example of usage of this library with
<input type="time" />
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('types into the input', () => {
render(
<>
<label for="time">Enter a time</label>
<input type="time" id="time" />
</>,
)
const input = screen.getByLabelText(/enter a time/i)
userEvent.type(input, '13:58')
expect(input.value).toBe('13:58')
})
Simulates the keyboard events described by text
. This is similar to
userEvent.type()
but without any clicking or changing the selection range.
You should use
userEvent.keyboard
if you want to just simulate pressing buttons on the keyboard. You should useuserEvent.type
if you just want to conveniently insert some text into an input field or textarea.
Keystrokes can be described:
- Per printable character
The brackets
userEvent.keyboard('foo') // translates to: f, o, o
{
and[
are used as special character and can be referenced by doubling them.userEvent.keyboard('{{a[[') // translates to: {, a, [
- Per
KeyboardEvent.key
(only supports alphanumeric values of
key
)This does not keep any key pressed. SouserEvent.keyboard('{Shift}{f}{o}{o}') // translates to: Shift, f, o, o
Shift
will be lifted before pressingf
. - Per
KeyboardEvent.code
userEvent.keyboard('[ShiftLeft][KeyF][KeyO][KeyO]') // translates to: Shift, f, o, o
- Per legacy
userEvent.type
modifier/specialChar The modifiers like{shift}
(note the lowercase) will automatically be kept pressed, just like before. You can cancel this behavior by adding a/
to the end of the descriptor.userEvent.keyboard('{shift}{ctrl/}a{/shift}') // translates to: Shift(down), Control(down+up), a, Shift(up)
Keys can be kept pressed by adding a >
to the end of the descriptor - and
lifted by adding a /
to the beginning of the descriptor:
userEvent.keyboard('{Shift>}A{/Shift}') // translates to: Shift(down), A, Shift(up)
userEvent.keyboard
returns a keyboard state that can be used to continue
keyboard operations.
const keyboardState = userEvent.keyboard('[ControlLeft>]') // keydown [ControlLeft]
// ... inspect some changes ...
userEvent.keyboard('a', {keyboardState}) // press [KeyA] with active ctrlKey modifier
The mapping of key
to code
is performed by a
default key map
portraying a "default" US-keyboard. You can provide your own local keyboard
mapping per option.
userEvent.keyboard('?', {keyboardMap: myOwnLocaleKeyboardMap})
Future versions might try to interpolate the modifiers needed to reach a printable key on the keyboard. E.g. Automatically pressing
{Shift}
when CapsLock is not active andA
is referenced. If you don't wish this behavior, you can passautoModify: false
when usinguserEvent.keyboard
in your code.
Uploads file to an <input>
. For uploading multiple files use <input>
with
multiple
attribute and the second upload
argument must be array then. Also
it's possible to initialize click or change event with using third argument.
If options.applyAccept
is set to true
and there is an accept
attribute on
the element, files that don't match will be discarded.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('upload file', () => {
const file = new File(['hello'], 'hello.png', {type: 'image/png'})
render(
<div>
<label htmlFor="file-uploader">Upload file:</label>
<input id="file-uploader" type="file" />
</div>,
)
const input = screen.getByLabelText(/upload file/i)
userEvent.upload(input, file)
expect(input.files[0]).toStrictEqual(file)
expect(input.files.item(0)).toStrictEqual(file)
expect(input.files).toHaveLength(1)
})
test('upload multiple files', () => {
const files = [
new File(['hello'], 'hello.png', {type: 'image/png'}),
new File(['there'], 'there.png', {type: 'image/png'}),
]
render(
<div>
<label htmlFor="file-uploader">Upload file:</label>
<input id="file-uploader" type="file" multiple />
</div>,
)
const input = screen.getByLabelText(/upload file/i)
userEvent.upload(input, files)
expect(input.files).toHaveLength(2)
expect(input.files[0]).toStrictEqual(files[0])
expect(input.files[1]).toStrictEqual(files[1])
})
Selects the text inside an <input>
or <textarea>
and deletes it.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('clear', () => {
render(<textarea value="Hello, World!" />)
userEvent.clear(screen.getByRole('textbox', 'email'))
expect(screen.getByRole('textbox', 'email')).toHaveAttribute('value', '')
})
Selects the specified option(s) of a <select>
or a <select multiple>
element.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('selectOptions', () => {
render(
<select multiple data-testid="select-multiple">
<option data-testid="val1" value="1">
A
</option>
<option data-testid="val2" value="2">
B
</option>
<option data-testid="val3" value="3">
C
</option>
</select>,
)
userEvent.selectOptions(screen.getByTestId('select-multiple'), ['1', '3'])
expect(screen.getByTestId('val1').selected).toBe(true)
expect(screen.getByTestId('val2').selected).toBe(false)
expect(screen.getByTestId('val3').selected).toBe(true)
})
The values
parameter can be either an array of values or a singular scalar
value.
It also accepts option nodes:
userEvent.selectOptions(screen.getByTestId('select-multiple'), [
screen.getByText('A'),
screen.getByText('B'),
])
Remove the selection for the specified option(s) of a <select multiple>
element.
import * as React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('deselectOptions', () => {
render(
<select multiple>
<option value="1">A</option>
<option value="2">B</option>
<option value="3">C</option>
</select>,
)
userEvent.selectOptions(screen.getByRole('listbox'), '2')
expect(screen.getByText('B').selected).toBe(true)
userEvent.deselectOptions(screen.getByRole('listbox'), '2')
expect(screen.getByText('B').selected).toBe(false)
// can do multiple at once as well:
// userEvent.deselectOptions(screen.getByRole('listbox'), ['1', '2'])
})
The values
parameter can be either an array of values or a singular scalar
value.
Fires a tab event changing the document.activeElement in the same way the browser does.
Options:
shift
(defaultfalse
) can be true or false to invert tab direction.focusTrap
(defaultdocument
) a container element to restrict the tabbing within.
A note about tab: jsdom does not support tabbing, so this feature is a way to enable tests to verify tabbing from the end user's perspective. However, this limitation in jsdom will mean that components like focus-trap-react will not work with
userEvent.tab()
or jsdom. For that reason, thefocusTrap
option is available to let you ensure your user is restricted within a focus-trap.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import '@testing-library/jest-dom/extend-expect'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
it('should cycle elements in document tab order', () => {
render(
<div>
<input data-testid="element" type="checkbox" />
<input data-testid="element" type="radio" />
<input data-testid="element" type="number" />
</div>,
)
const [checkbox, radio, number] = screen.getAllByTestId('element')
expect(document.body).toHaveFocus()
userEvent.tab()
expect(checkbox).toHaveFocus()
userEvent.tab()
expect(radio).toHaveFocus()
userEvent.tab()
expect(number).toHaveFocus()
userEvent.tab()
// cycle goes back to the body element
expect(document.body).toHaveFocus()
userEvent.tab()
expect(checkbox).toHaveFocus()
})
Hovers over element
.
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent from '@testing-library/user-event'
import Tooltip from '../tooltip'
test('hover', () => {
const messageText = 'Hello'
render(
<Tooltip messageText={messageText}>
<TrashIcon aria-label="Delete" />
</Tooltip>,
)
userEvent.hover(screen.getByLabelText(/delete/i))
expect(screen.getByText(messageText)).toBeInTheDocument()
userEvent.unhover(screen.getByLabelText(/delete/i))
expect(screen.queryByText(messageText)).not.toBeInTheDocument()
})
Unhovers out of element
.
See above for an example
Allows you to simulate the user pasting some text into an input.
test('should paste text in input', () => {
render(<MyInput />)
const text = 'Hello, world!'
userEvent.paste(getByRole('textbox', {name: /paste your greeting/i}), text)
expect(element).toHaveValue(text)
})
You can use the eventInit
if what you're pasting should have clipboardData
(like files
).
A handful set of special characters used in type method.
Key | Character |
---|---|
arrowLeft | {arrowleft} |
arrowRight | {arrowright} |
arrowDown | {arrowdown} |
arrowUp | {arrowup} |
home | {home} |
end | {end} |
enter | {enter} |
escape | {esc} |
delete | {del} |
backspace | {backspace} |
selectAll | {selectall} |
space | {space} |
whitespace | ' ' |
Usage example:
import React from 'react'
import {render, screen} from '@testing-library/react'
import userEvent, {specialChars} from '@testing-library/user-event'
test('delete characters within the selectedRange', () => {
render(
<div>
<label htmlFor="my-input">Example:</label>
<input id="my-input" type="text" value="This is a bad example" />
</div>,
)
const input = screen.getByLabelText(/example/i)
input.setSelectionRange(10, 13)
userEvent.type(input, `${specialChars.backspace}good`)
expect(input).toHaveValue('This is a good example')
})
Looking to contribute? Look for the Good First Issue label.
Please file an issue for bugs, missing documentation, or unexpected behavior.
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This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
MIT