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Version: 26.x

Jest Platform

You can cherry pick specific features of Jest and use them as standalone packages. Here's a list of the available packages:

jest-changed-files#

Tool for identifying modified files in a git/hg repository. Exports two functions:

  • getChangedFilesForRoots returns a promise that resolves to an object with the changed files and repos.
  • findRepos returns a promise that resolves to a set of repositories contained in the specified path.

Example#

const {getChangedFilesForRoots} = require('jest-changed-files');
// print the set of modified files since last commit in the current repo
getChangedFilesForRoots(['./'], {
lastCommit: true,
}).then(result => console.log(result.changedFiles));

You can read more about jest-changed-files in the readme file.

jest-diff#

Tool for visualizing changes in data. Exports a function that compares two values of any type and returns a "pretty-printed" string illustrating the difference between the two arguments.

Example#

const diff = require('jest-diff').default;
const a = {a: {b: {c: 5}}};
const b = {a: {b: {c: 6}}};
const result = diff(a, b);
// print diff
console.log(result);

jest-docblock#

Tool for extracting and parsing the comments at the top of a JavaScript file. Exports various functions to manipulate the data inside the comment block.

Example#

const {parseWithComments} = require('jest-docblock');
const code = `
/**
* This is a sample
*
* @flow
*/
console.log('Hello World!');
`;
const parsed = parseWithComments(code);
// prints an object with two attributes: comments and pragmas.
console.log(parsed);

You can read more about jest-docblock in the readme file.

jest-get-type#

Module that identifies the primitive type of any JavaScript value. Exports a function that returns a string with the type of the value passed as argument.

Example#

const getType = require('jest-get-type');
const array = [1, 2, 3];
const nullValue = null;
const undefinedValue = undefined;
// prints 'array'
console.log(getType(array));
// prints 'null'
console.log(getType(nullValue));
// prints 'undefined'
console.log(getType(undefinedValue));

jest-validate#

Tool for validating configurations submitted by users. Exports a function that takes two arguments: the user's configuration and an object containing an example configuration and other options. The return value is an object with two attributes:

  • hasDeprecationWarnings, a boolean indicating whether the submitted configuration has deprecation warnings,
  • isValid, a boolean indicating whether the configuration is correct or not.

Example#

const {validate} = require('jest-validate');
const configByUser = {
transform: '<rootDir>/node_modules/my-custom-transform',
};
const result = validate(configByUser, {
comment: ' Documentation: http://custom-docs.com',
exampleConfig: {transform: '<rootDir>/node_modules/babel-jest'},
});
console.log(result);

You can read more about jest-validate in the readme file.

jest-worker#

Module used for parallelization of tasks. Exports a class JestWorker that takes the path of Node.js module and lets you call the module's exported methods as if they were class methods, returning a promise that resolves when the specified method finishes its execution in a forked process.

Example#

// heavy-task.js
module.exports = {
myHeavyTask: args => {
// long running CPU intensive task.
},
};
// main.js
async function main() {
const worker = new Worker(require.resolve('./heavy-task.js'));
// run 2 tasks in parallel with different arguments
const results = await Promise.all([
worker.myHeavyTask({foo: 'bar'}),
worker.myHeavyTask({bar: 'foo'}),
]);
console.log(results);
}
main();

You can read more about jest-worker in the readme file.

pretty-format#

Exports a function that converts any JavaScript value into a human-readable string. Supports all built-in JavaScript types out of the box and allows extension for application-specific types via user-defined plugins.

Example#

const prettyFormat = require('pretty-format');
const val = {object: {}};
val.circularReference = val;
val[Symbol('foo')] = 'foo';
val.map = new Map([['prop', 'value']]);
val.array = [-0, Infinity, NaN];
console.log(prettyFormat(val));

You can read more about pretty-format in the readme file.

Last updated on by Sébastien Lorber