Expect
When you're writing tests, you often need to check that values meet certain conditions. expect gives you access to a number of "matchers" that let you validate different things.
For additional Jest matchers maintained by the Jest Community check out jest-extended.
The TypeScript examples from this page will only work as documented if you explicitly import Jest APIs:
import {expect, jest, test} from '@jest/globals';
Consult the Getting Started guide for details on how to setup Jest with TypeScript.
Reference
- Expect
- Modifiers
- Matchers
.toBe(value).toHaveBeenCalled().toHaveBeenCalledTimes(number).toHaveBeenCalledWith(arg1, arg2, ...).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith(arg1, arg2, ...).toHaveBeenNthCalledWith(nthCall, arg1, arg2, ....).toHaveReturned().toHaveReturnedTimes(number).toHaveReturnedWith(value).toHaveLastReturnedWith(value).toHaveNthReturnedWith(nthCall, value).toHaveLength(number).toHaveProperty(keyPath, value?).toBeCloseTo(number, numDigits?).toBeDefined().toBeFalsy().toBeGreaterThan(number | bigint).toBeGreaterThanOrEqual(number | bigint).toBeLessThan(number | bigint).toBeLessThanOrEqual(number | bigint).toBeInstanceOf(Class).toBeNull().toBeTruthy().toBeUndefined().toBeNaN().toContain(item).toContainEqual(item).toEqual(value).toMatch(regexp | string).toMatchObject(object).toMatchSnapshot(propertyMatchers?, hint?).toMatchInlineSnapshot(propertyMatchers?, inlineSnapshot).toStrictEqual(value).toThrow(error?).toThrowErrorMatchingSnapshot(hint?).toThrowErrorMatchingInlineSnapshot(inlineSnapshot)
- Asymmetric Matchers
expect.anything()expect.any(constructor)expect.arrayContaining(array)expect.not.arrayContaining(array)expect.arrayOf(value)expect.not.arrayOf(value)expect.closeTo(number, numDigits?)expect.objectContaining(object)expect.not.objectContaining(object)expect.stringContaining(string)expect.not.stringContaining(string)expect.stringMatching(string | regexp)expect.not.stringMatching(string | regexp)
- Assertion Count
- Extend Utilities
- Serializable properties
Expect
expect(value)
The expect function is used every time you want to test a value. You will rarely call expect by itself. Instead, you will use expect along with a "matcher" function to assert something about a value.
It's easier to understand this with an example. Let's say you have a method bestLaCroixFlavor() which is supposed to return the string 'grapefruit'. Here's how you would test that:
test('the best flavor is grapefruit', () => {
expect(bestLaCroixFlavor()).toBe('grapefruit');
});
In this case, toBe is the matcher function. There are a lot of different matcher functions, documented below, to help you test different things.
The argument to expect should be the value that your code produces, and any argument to the matcher should be the correct value. If you mix them up, your tests will still work, but the error messages on failing tests will look strange.
Modifiers
.not
If you know how to test something, .not lets you test its opposite. For example, this code tests that the best La Croix flavor is not coconut:
test('the best flavor is not coconut', () => {
expect(bestLaCroixFlavor()).not.toBe('coconut');
});
.resolves
Use resolves to unwrap the value of a fulfilled promise so any other matcher can be chained. If the promise is rejected the assertion fails.
For example, this code tests that the promise resolves and that the resulting value is 'lemon':
test('resolves to lemon', () => {
// make sure to add a return statement
return expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.toBe('lemon');
});
Since you are still testing promises, the test is still asynchronous. Hence, you will need to tell Jest to wait by returning the unwrapped assertion.
Alternatively, you can use async/await in combination with .resolves:
test('resolves to lemon', async () => {
await expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.toBe('lemon');
await expect(Promise.resolve('lemon')).resolves.not.toBe('octopus');
});
.rejects
Use .rejects to unwrap the reason of a rejected promise so any other matcher can be chained. If the promise is fulfilled the assertion fails.
For example, this code tests that the promise rejects with reason 'octopus':
test('rejects to octopus', () => {
// make sure to add a return statement
return expect(Promise.reject(new Error('octopus'))).rejects.toThrow(
'octopus',
);
});
Since you are still testing promises, the test is still asynchronous. Hence, you will need to tell Jest to wait by returning the unwrapped assertion.
Alternatively, you can use async/await in combination with .rejects.
test('rejects to octopus', async () => {
await expect(Promise.reject(new Error('octopus'))).rejects.toThrow('octopus');
});
Matchers
.toBe(value)
Use .toBe to compare primitive values or to check referential identity of object instances. It calls Object.is to compare values, which is even better for testing than === strict equality operator.
For example, this code will validate some properties of the can object:
const can = {
name: 'pamplemousse',
ounces: 12,
};
describe('the can', () => {
test('has 12 ounces', () => {
expect(can.ounces).toBe(12);
});
test('has a sophisticated name', () => {
expect(can.name).toBe('pamplemousse');
});
});
Don't use .toBe with floating-point numbers. For example, due to rounding, in JavaScript 0.2 + 0.1 is not strictly equal to 0.3. If you have floating point numbers, try .toBeCloseTo instead.
Although the .toBe matcher checks referential identity, it reports a deep comparison of values if the assertion fails. If differences between properties do not help you to understand why a test fails, especially if the report is large, then you might move the comparison into the expect function. For example, to assert whether or not elements are the same instance:
- rewrite
expect(received).toBe(expected)asexpect(Object.is(received, expected)).toBe(true) - rewrite
expect(received).not.toBe(expected)asexpect(Object.is(received, expected)).toBe(false)
.toHaveBeenCalled()
Use .toHaveBeenCalled to ensure that a mock function was called.
For example, let's say you have a drinkAll(drink, flavour) function that takes a drink function and applies it to all available beverages. You might want to check that drink gets called. You can do that with this test suite:
function drinkAll(callback, flavour) {
if (flavour !== 'octopus') {
callback(flavour);
}
}
describe('drinkAll', () => {
test('drinks something lemon-flavoured', () => {
const drink = jest.fn();
drinkAll(drink, 'lemon');
expect(drink).toHaveBeenCalled();
});
test('does not drink something octopus-flavoured', () => {
const drink = jest.fn();
drinkAll(drink, 'octopus');
expect(drink).not.toHaveBeenCalled();
});
});
.toHaveBeenCalledTimes(number)
Use .toHaveBeenCalledTimes to ensure that a mock function got called exact number of times.
For example, let's say you have a drinkEach(drink, Array<flavor>) function that takes a drink function and applies it to array of passed beverages. You might want to check that drink function was called exact number of times. You can do that with this test suite:
test('drinkEach drinks each drink', () => {
const drink = jest.fn();
drinkEach(drink, ['lemon', 'octopus']);
expect(drink).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2);
});
.toHaveBeenCalledWith(arg1, arg2, ...)
Use .toHaveBeenCalledWith to ensure that a mock function was called with specific arguments. The arguments are checked with the same algorithm that .toEqual uses.
For example, let's say that you can register a beverage with a register function, and applyToAll(f) should apply the function f to all registered beverages. To make sure this works, you could write:
test('registration applies correctly to orange La Croix', () => {
const beverage = new LaCroix('orange');
register(beverage);
const f = jest.fn();
applyToAll(f);
expect(f).toHaveBeenCalledWith(beverage);
});
.toHaveBeenLastCalledWith(arg1, arg2, ...)
If you have a mock function, you can use .toHaveBeenLastCalledWith to test what arguments it was last called with. For example, let's say you have a applyToAllFlavors(f) function that applies f to a bunch of flavors, and you want to ensure that when you call it, the last flavor it operates on is 'mango'. You can write:
test('applying to all flavors does mango last', () => {
const drink = jest.fn();
applyToAllFlavors(drink);
expect(drink).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('mango');
});
.toHaveBeenNthCalledWith(nthCall, arg1, arg2, ....)
If you have a mock function, you can use .toHaveBeenNthCalledWith to test what arguments it was nth called with. For example, let's say you have a drinkEach(drink, Array<flavor>) function that applies f to a bunch of flavors, and you want to ensure that when you call it, the first flavor it operates on is 'lemon' and the second one is 'octopus'. You can write:
test('drinkEach drinks each drink', () => {
const drink = jest.fn();
drinkEach(drink, ['lemon', 'octopus']);
expect(drink).toHaveBeenNthCalledWith(1, 'lemon');
expect(drink).toHaveBeenNthCalledWith(2, 'octopus');
});
The nth argument must be positive integer starting from 1.
.toHaveReturned()
If you have a mock function, you can use .toHaveReturned to test that the mock function successfully returned (i.e., did not throw an error) at least one time. For example, let's say you have a mock drink that returns true. You can write:
test('drinks returns', () => {
const drink = jest.fn(() => true);
drink();
expect(drink).toHaveReturned();
});
.toHaveReturnedTimes(number)
Use .toHaveReturnedTimes to ensure that a mock function returned successfully (i.e., did not throw an error) an exact number of times. Any calls to the mock function that throw an error are not counted toward the number of times the function returned.
For example, let's say you have a mock drink that returns true. You can write:
test('drink returns twice', () => {
const drink = jest.fn(() => true);
drink();
drink();
expect(drink).toHaveReturnedTimes(2);
});
.toHaveReturnedWith(value)
Use .toHaveReturnedWith to ensure that a mock function returned a specific value.
For example, let's say you have a mock drink that returns the name of the beverage that was consumed. You can write:
test('drink returns La Croix', () => {
const beverage = {name: 'La Croix'};
const drink = jest.fn(beverage => beverage.name);
drink(beverage);
expect(drink).toHaveReturnedWith('La Croix');
});
.toHaveLastReturnedWith(value)
Use .toHaveLastReturnedWith to test the specific value that a mock function last returned. If the last call to the mock function threw an error, then this matcher will fail no matter what value you provided as the expected return value.
For example, let's say you have a mock drink that returns the name of the beverage that was consumed. You can write:
test('drink returns La Croix (Orange) last', () => {
const beverage1 = {name: 'La Croix (Lemon)'};
const beverage2 = {name: 'La Croix (Orange)'};
const drink = jest.fn(beverage => beverage.name);
drink(beverage1);
drink(beverage2);
expect(drink).toHaveLastReturnedWith('La Croix (Orange)');
});
.toHaveNthReturnedWith(nthCall, value)
Use .toHaveNthReturnedWith to test the specific value that a mock function returned for the nth call. If the nth call to the mock function threw an error, then this matcher will fail no matter what value you provided as the expected return value.
For example, let's say you have a mock drink that returns the name of the beverage that was consumed. You can write:
test('drink returns expected nth calls', () => {
const beverage1 = {name: 'La Croix (Lemon)'};
const beverage2 = {name: 'La Croix (Orange)'};
const drink = jest.fn(beverage => beverage.name);
drink(beverage1);
drink(beverage2);
expect(drink).toHaveNthReturnedWith(1, 'La Croix (Lemon)');
expect(drink).toHaveNthReturnedWith(2, 'La Croix (Orange)');
});
The nth argument must be positive integer starting from 1.
.toHaveLength(number)
Use .toHaveLength to check that an object has a .length property and it is set to a certain numeric value.
This is especially useful for checking arrays or strings size.
expect([1, 2, 3]).toHaveLength(3);
expect('abc').toHaveLength(3);
expect('').not.toHaveLength(5);
.toHaveProperty(keyPath, value?)
Use .toHaveProperty to check if property at provided reference keyPath exists for an object. For checking deeply nested properties in an object you may use dot notation or an array containing the keyPath for deep references.
You can provide an optional value argument to compare the received property value (recursively for all properties of object instances, also known as deep equality, like the toEqual matcher).
The following example contains a houseForSale object with nested properties. We are using toHaveProperty to check for the existence and values of various properties in the object.
// Object containing house features to be tested
const houseForSale = {
bath: true,
bedrooms: 4,
kitchen: {
amenities: ['oven', 'stove', 'washer'],
area: 20,
wallColor: 'white',
'nice.oven': true,
},
livingroom: {
amenities: [
{
couch: [
['large', {dimensions: [20, 20]}],
['small', {dimensions: [10, 10]}],
],
},
],
},
'ceiling.height': 2,
};
test('this house has my desired features', () => {
// Example Referencing
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty('bath');
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty('bedrooms', 4);
expect(houseForSale).not.toHaveProperty('pool');
// Deep referencing using dot notation
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty('kitchen.area', 20);
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty('kitchen.amenities', [
'oven',
'stove',
'washer',
]);
expect(houseForSale).not.toHaveProperty('kitchen.open');
// Deep referencing using an array containing the keyPath
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(['kitchen', 'area'], 20);
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(
['kitchen', 'amenities'],
['oven', 'stove', 'washer'],
);
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(['kitchen', 'amenities', 0], 'oven');
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(
'livingroom.amenities[0].couch[0][1].dimensions[0]',
20,
);
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(['kitchen', 'nice.oven']);
expect(houseForSale).not.toHaveProperty(['kitchen', 'open']);
// Referencing keys with dot in the key itself
expect(houseForSale).toHaveProperty(['ceiling.height'], 'tall');
});
.toBeCloseTo(number, numDigits?)
Use toBeCloseTo to compare floating point numbers for approximate equality.
The optional numDigits argument limits the number of digits to check after the decimal point. For the default value 2, the test criterion is Math.abs(expected - received) < 0.005 (that is, 10 ** -2 / 2).
Intuitive equality comparisons often fail, because arithmetic on decimal (base 10) values often have rounding errors in limited precision binary (base 2) representation. For example, this test fails:
test('adding works sanely with decimals', () => {
expect(0.2 + 0.1).toBe(0.3); // Fails!
});
It fails because in JavaScript, 0.2 + 0.1 is actually 0.30000000000000004.
For example, this test passes with a precision of 5 digits:
test('adding works sanely with decimals', () => {
expect(0.2 + 0.1).toBeCloseTo(0.3, 5);
});
Because floating point errors are the problem that toBeCloseTo solves, it does not support big integer values.
.toBeDefined()
Use .toBeDefined to check that a variable is not undefined. For example, if you want to check that a function fetchNewFlavorIdea() returns something, you can write:
test('there is a new flavor idea', () => {
expect(fetchNewFlavorIdea()).toBeDefined();
});
You could write expect(fetchNewFlavorIdea()).not.toBe(undefined), but it's better practice to avoid referring to undefined directly in your code.
.toBeFalsy()
Use .toBeFalsy when you don't care what a value is and you want to ensure a value is false in a boolean context. For example, let's say you have some application code that looks like:
drinkSomeLaCroix();
if (!getErrors()) {
drinkMoreLaCroix();
}
You may not care what getErrors returns, specifically - it might return false, null, or 0, and your code would still work. So if you want to test there are no errors after drinking some La Croix, you could write:
test('drinking La Croix does not lead to errors', () => {
drinkSomeLaCroix();
expect(getErrors()).toBeFalsy();
});
In JavaScript, there are six falsy values: false, 0, '', null, undefined, and NaN. Everything else is truthy.
.toBeGreaterThan(number | bigint)
Use toBeGreaterThan to compare received > expected for number or big integer values. For example, test that ouncesPerCan() returns a value of more than 10 ounces:
test('ounces per can is more than 10', () => {
expect(ouncesPerCan()).toBeGreaterThan(10);
});
.toBeGreaterThanOrEqual(number | bigint)
Use toBeGreaterThanOrEqual to compare received >= expected for number or big integer values. For example, test that ouncesPerCan() returns a value of at least 12 ounces:
test('ounces per can is at least 12', () => {
expect(ouncesPerCan()).toBeGreaterThanOrEqual(12);
});
.toBeLessThan(number | bigint)
Use toBeLessThan to compare received < expected for number or big integer values. For example, test that ouncesPerCan() returns a value of less than 20 ounces:
test('ounces per can is less than 20', () => {
expect(ouncesPerCan()).toBeLessThan(20);
});
.toBeLessThanOrEqual(number | bigint)
Use toBeLessThanOrEqual to compare received <= expected for number or big integer values. For example, test that ouncesPerCan() returns a value of at most 12 ounces:
test('ounces per can is at most 12', () => {
expect(ouncesPerCan()).toBeLessThanOrEqual(12);
});
.toBeInstanceOf(Class)
Use .toBeInstanceOf(Class) to check that an object is an instance of a class. This matcher uses instanceof underneath.
class A {}
expect(new A()).toBeInstanceOf(A);
expect(() => {}).toBeInstanceOf(Function);
expect(new A()).toBeInstanceOf(Function); // throws
.toBeNull()
.toBeNull() is the same as .toBe(null) but the error messages are a bit nicer. So use .toBeNull() when you want to check that something is null.
function bloop() {
return null;
}
test('bloop returns null', () => {
expect(bloop()).toBeNull();
});
.toBeTruthy()
Use .toBeTruthy when you don't care what a value is and you want to ensure a value is true in a boolean context. For example, let's say you have some application code that looks like:
drinkSomeLaCroix();
if (thirstInfo()) {
drinkMoreLaCroix();
}
You may not care what thirstInfo returns, specifically - it might return true or a complex object, and your code would still work. So if you want to test that thirstInfo will be truthy after drinking some La Croix, you could write:
test('drinking La Croix leads to having thirst info', () => {
drinkSomeLaCroix();
expect(thirstInfo()).toBeTruthy();
});
In JavaScript, there are six falsy values: false, 0, '', null, undefined, and NaN. Everything else is truthy.
.toBeUndefined()
Use .toBeUndefined to check that a variable is undefined. For example, if you want to check that a function bestDrinkForFlavor(flavor) returns undefined for the 'octopus' flavor, because there is no good octopus-flavored drink:
test('the best drink for octopus flavor is undefined', () => {
expect(bestDrinkForFlavor('octopus')).toBeUndefined();
});
You could write expect(bestDrinkForFlavor('octopus')).toBe(undefined), but it's better practice to avoid referring to undefined directly in your code.
.toBeNaN()
Use .toBeNaN when checking a value is NaN.
test('passes when value is NaN', () => {
expect(NaN).toBeNaN();
expect(1).not.toBeNaN();
});
.toContain(item)
Use .toContain when you want to check that an item is in an array. For testing the items in the array, this uses ===, a strict equality check. .toContain can also check whether a string is a substring of another string.
For example, if getAllFlavors() returns an array of flavors and you want to be sure that lime is in there, you can write:
test('the flavor list contains lime', () => {
expect(getAllFlavors()).toContain('lime');
});
This matcher also accepts others iterables such as strings, sets, node lists and HTML collections.
.toContainEqual(item)
Use .toContainEqual when you want to check that an item with a specific structure and values is contained in an array. For testing the items in the array, this matcher recursively checks the equality of all fields, rather than checking for object identity.
describe('my beverage', () => {
test('is delicious and not sour', () => {
const myBeverage = {delicious: true, sour: false};
expect(myBeverages()).toContainEqual(myBeverage);
});
});
.toEqual(value)
Use .toEqual to compare recursively all properties of object instances (also known as "deep" equality). It calls Object.is to compare primitive values, which is even better for testing than === strict equality operator.
For example, .toEqual and .toBe behave differently in this test suite, so all the tests pass:
const can1 = {
flavor: 'grapefruit',
ounces: 12,
};
const can2 = {
flavor: 'grapefruit',
ounces: 12,
};
describe('the La Croix cans on my desk', () => {
test('have all the same properties', () => {
expect(can1).toEqual(can2);
});
test('are not the exact same can', () => {
expect(can1).not.toBe(can2);
});
});
toEqual ignores object keys with undefined properties, undefined array items, array sparseness, or object type mismatch. To take these into account use .toStrictEqual instead.
.toEqual won't perform a deep equality check for two errors. Only the message property of an Error is considered for equality. It is recommended to use the .toThrow matcher for testing against errors.
If differences between properties do not help you to understand why a test fails, especially if the report is large, then you might move the comparison into the expect function. For example, use equals method of Buffer class to assert whether or not buffers contain the same content:
- rewrite
expect(received).toEqual(expected)asexpect(received.equals(expected)).toBe(true) - rewrite
expect(received).not.toEqual(expected)asexpect(received.equals(expected)).toBe(false)
.toMatch(regexp | string)
Use .toMatch to check that a string matches a regular expression.
For example, you might not know what exactly essayOnTheBestFlavor() returns, but you know it's a really long string, and the substring grapefruit should be in there somewhere. You can test this with:
describe('an essay on the best flavor', () => {
test('mentions grapefruit', () => {
expect(essayOnTheBestFlavor()).toMatch(/grapefruit/);
expect(essayOnTheBestFlavor()).toMatch(new RegExp('grapefruit'));
});
});
This matcher also accepts a string, which it will try to match:
describe('grapefruits are healthy', () => {
test('grapefruits are a fruit', () => {
expect('grapefruits').toMatch('fruit');
});
});