[React Testing] Test timer related feature in React

Sometimes your react component may need to do some cleanup work in the return value from useEffect or useLayoutEffect, or the componentWillUnmount lifecycle method for class components. Luckily for us, as far as React Testing Library is concerned, whichever of those you use is an implementation detail, so your test looks exactly the same regardless of how you implement it. Check out how you can test that simply with React Testing Library and a <Countdown />component.

Component:

import React from 'react'

function Countdown() {
  const [remainingTime, setRemainingTime] = React.useState(10000)
  const end = React.useRef(new Date().getTime() + remainingTime)
  React.useEffect(() => {
    const interval = setInterval(() => {
      const newRemainingTime = end.current - new Date().getTime()
      if (newRemainingTime <= 0) {
        clearInterval(interval)
        setRemainingTime(0)
      } else {
        setRemainingTime(newRemainingTime)
      }
    })
    return () => clearInterval(interval)
  }, [])
  return remainingTime
}

export { Countdown }

Testing:

import React from 'react'
import { render, act } from '@testing-library/react'
import { Countdown } from '../extra/countdown'

beforeAll(() => {
  jest.spyOn(console, 'error').mockImplementation(() => {})
})

afterAll(() => {
  console.error.mockRestore()
})

afterEach(() => {
  jest.clearAllMocks()
  jest.useRealTimers()
})

test('does not attempt to set state when unmounted (to prevent memory leaks)', () => {
  jest.useFakeTimers() // similar to fakeAsync
  const { unmount } = render(<Countdown />)
  unmount()
  // act is similar to Angualr flush
  act(() => jest.runOnlyPendingTimers())
  expect(console.error).not.toHaveBeenCalled()
})

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转载自www.cnblogs.com/Answer1215/p/12825014.html