I'm using @[email protected], @ngneat/[email protected]
(with Jest), [email protected]
in a project and everything works on application when I run ng serve
or even ng build
, but it fails when I try to run a test suite for a @Pipe
that uses Inputmask
:
@Pipe
:
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
import Inputmask from 'inputmask';
@Pipe({
name: 'appSomePipe',
})
export class SomePipe implements PipeTransform {
transform(value: string): string {
return Inputmask.format(value, {
jitMasking: true,
mask: '1111-1',
});
}
}
@Spec
:
import { createPipeFactory, SpectatorPipe } from '@ngneat/spectator/jest';
import { SomePipe } from './some.pipe';
describe('SomePipe', () => {
let spectator: SpectatorPipe<SomePipe>;
const createPipe = createPipeFactory(SomePipe);
it('test', () => {
spectator = createPipe(`{{ '11111' | appSome }}`);
expect(spectator.element).toHaveText('1111-1');
});
});
When I run ng test
, it shows:
ReferenceError: customElements is not defined
2 |
> 3 | import Inputmask from 'inputmask';
PS: This error just appears for Angular 9, in Angular 8 all tests were successfully passed.
I'm using @[email protected], @ngneat/[email protected]
(with Jest), [email protected]
in a project and everything works on application when I run ng serve
or even ng build
, but it fails when I try to run a test suite for a @Pipe
that uses Inputmask
:
@Pipe
:
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
import Inputmask from 'inputmask';
@Pipe({
name: 'appSomePipe',
})
export class SomePipe implements PipeTransform {
transform(value: string): string {
return Inputmask.format(value, {
jitMasking: true,
mask: '1111-1',
});
}
}
@Spec
:
import { createPipeFactory, SpectatorPipe } from '@ngneat/spectator/jest';
import { SomePipe } from './some.pipe';
describe('SomePipe', () => {
let spectator: SpectatorPipe<SomePipe>;
const createPipe = createPipeFactory(SomePipe);
it('test', () => {
spectator = createPipe(`{{ '11111' | appSome }}`);
expect(spectator.element).toHaveText('1111-1');
});
});
When I run ng test
, it shows:
ReferenceError: customElements is not defined
2 |
> 3 | import Inputmask from 'inputmask';
PS: This error just appears for Angular 9, in Angular 8 all tests were successfully passed.
Share Improve this question edited Sep 30, 2021 at 21:31 Guerric P 31.8k6 gold badges58 silver badges104 bronze badges asked Mar 19, 2020 at 16:20 dev_054dev_054 3,7189 gold badges36 silver badges59 bronze badges4 Answers
Reset to default 11 +200A quick search into inputmask
repository shows that it uses customElements
which is a feature implemented by modern browsers in order to create native web components (without a framework).
When looking at Jest documentation we can see that the default testEnvironment
is jsdom, which is an implementation of the DOM that runs without a browser. This library implements custom elements since version 16.2.0 and this version is pretty recent, and is not yet used by jest (the last version of jest uses jsdom v15.1.1).
So you just have to wait for jest to update the jsdom dependency, and then update your project to use the latest version of jest.
Another option: you can use jest-browser which runs Jest in a headless browser based on puppeteer.
Update 05-2020:
Upgrade to (at least) Jest 26.0.0 which uses jsdom 16.2.0 (Source)
jsdom does not support customElements until v16.2.0 as Guerric P wrote.
To get jest running with jsdom v 16 you need to do the following
yarn add jest-environment-jsdom-sixteen
Then in you jest.config.js
add this
module.exports = {
testEnvironment: 'jest-environment-jsdom-sixteen',
...
}
this will force jest to use a newer implementation. and this should solve your problem.
I remember stumbling upon your question and I stumbled upon something else related to ngx-bootstrap
with regards to an import
not working in Angular 9
.
https://valor-software.com/ngx-bootstrap/#/datepicker
Check out the usage section and its warning about Angular 9
.
Try doing import InputMask from 'inputmask/somethingMoreSpecificHere';
or `import { somethingSpecificHere } from 'inputmask';
The problem is that you are not injecting the Inputmask dependency into your test.
This is because you are using a javascript import. There are Angular libraries to do this (ngx-mask).
In Angular we use Dependency Injection with IOC, so for this example I'll use an InputMaskService to create the angular dependency.
Pipe
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
import { InputMaskService } from './inputmask.service';
@Pipe({
name: 'appSomePipe',
})
export class SomePipe implements PipeTransform {
constructor(private inputMaskService: InputMaskService){}
transform(value: string): string {
return this.inputMaskService.format(value, {
jitMasking: true,
mask: '1111-1',
});
}
}
Note that I'm injecting the service in the constructor and using that instance in the transform
method.
Test
You can create an instance of your pipe passing the service reference
beforeEach(() => {
const inputMaskService = new InputMaskService();
const pipe = new SomePipe(inputMaskService);
});