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@fokusferit
Last active June 18, 2024 11:27
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Difference between Shallow, Mount and render of Enzyme

Shallow

Real unit test (isolation, no children render)

Simple shallow

Calls:

  • constructor
  • render

Shallow + setProps

Calls:

  • componentWillReceiveProps
  • shouldComponentUpdate
  • componentWillUpdate
  • render

Shallow + unmount

Calls:

  • componentWillUnmount

Mount

The only way to test componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate. Full rendering including child components. Requires a DOM (jsdom, domino). More constly in execution time. If react is included before JSDOM, it can require some tricks:

require('fbjs/lib/ExecutionEnvironment').canUseDOM = true;

Simple mount

Calls:

  • constructor
  • render
  • componentDidMount

Mount + setProps

Calls:

  • componentWillReceiveProps
  • shouldComponentUpdate
  • componentWillUpdate
  • render
  • componentDidUpdate

Mount + unmount

Calls:

  • componentWillUnmount

Render

only calls render but renders all children.

So my rule of thumbs is:

  • Always begin with shallow
  • If componentDidMount or componentDidUpdate should be tested, use mount
  • If you want to test component lifecycle and children behavior, use mount
  • If you want to test children rendering with less overhead than mount and you are not interested in lifecycle methods, use render

There seems to be a very tiny use case for render. I like it because it seems snappier than requiring jsdom but as @ljharb said, we cannot really test React internals with this.

I wonder if it would be possible to emulate lifecycle methods with the render method just like shallow ? I would really appreciate if you could give me the use cases you have for render internally or what use cases you have seen in the wild.

I'm also curious to know why shallow does not call componentDidUpdate.

Kudos goes to enzymejs/enzyme#465 (comment) this gist is basically a copy of the comment but I wanted to separate it from there as it includes a lot of general Enzyme information which is missing in the docs.

@BernardoMG
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Awesome! Thanks 👏

@nok91
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nok91 commented Jun 23, 2020

Simple and neat explanation! Love it, Thank you!! 👍🏻

@akm
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akm commented Jul 4, 2020

Great! Thanks 👍

@loopser123
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thank u

@Snouzy
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Snouzy commented Aug 30, 2020

Thanks a lot 👍

@felipe2g
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Thanks!!!!!!!!!!

@catalinberta
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Good one

@CodingInvoker
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In enzyme V3 I think shallow can call React lifecycle methods as well.

See doc: https://enzymejs.github.io/enzyme/docs/api/shallow.html

As of Enzyme v3, the shallow API does call React lifecycle methods such as componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate

@mageshk98
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Simple and clear explanation. Thanks, @fokusferit.

@m-sakthi
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Good one.. Thanks.

@xinbbbb
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xinbbbb commented Aug 16, 2021

Thanks! 👍

@hut8
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hut8 commented Feb 13, 2022

@fokusferit Thanks for this!
One thing to improve with respect to use cases for each: What if you have a component that needs a context, like:

  • a component that must be wrapped in a provider, e.g., your SessionContext.Provider
  • a component that needs to be rendered inside of a router (MemoryRouter?) because it uses useLocation()

If you use shallow, won't it just end up "rendering" the SessionContext.Provider/MemoryRouter because that's the first level of component? That seems like it would always be useless. I'm trying to figure this out now, and Google sent me here, but your gist doesn't quite mention these cases. Thanks again 👍

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