An attribute directive modifies the behavior of an element, component or another directive. Its name reflects the way the directive is applied: as an attribute on a host element.
Testing the Highlight directive
The sample application's Highlight directive sets the background color of an element based on either a data bound color or a default color (lightgray).
It also sets a custom property of the element (customProperty) to true for no reason other than to show that it can.
import {Directive, inject, input} from '@angular/core';/** * Set backgroundColor for the attached element to highlight color * and set the element's customProperty attribute to true */@Directive({ selector: '[highlight]', host: { '[style.backgroundColor]': 'bgColor() || defaultColor', },})export class Highlight { readonly defaultColor = 'rgb(211, 211, 211)'; // lightgray readonly bgColor = input('', {alias: 'highlight'});}
It's used throughout the application, perhaps most simply in the About component:
@Component({ imports: [Twain, Highlight], template: ` <h2 highlight="skyblue">About</h2> <h3>Quote of the day:</h3> <twain-quote /> `,})export class About {}
Testing the specific use of the Highlight directive within the About component requires only the techniques explored in the "Nested component tests" section of Component testing scenarios.
let fixture: ComponentFixture<About>;beforeEach(async () => { TestBed.configureTestingModule({ providers: [TwainService, UserService], schemas: [CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA], }); fixture = TestBed.createComponent(About); await fixture.whenStable();});it('should have skyblue <h2>', () => { const h2: HTMLElement = fixture.nativeElement.querySelector('h2'); const bgColor = h2.style.backgroundColor; expect(bgColor).toBe('skyblue');});
However, testing a single use case is unlikely to explore the full range of a directive's capabilities. Finding and testing all components that use the directive is tedious, brittle, and almost as unlikely to afford full coverage.
Class-only tests might be helpful, but attribute directives like this one tend to manipulate the DOM. Isolated unit tests don't touch the DOM and, therefore, do not inspire confidence in the directive's efficacy.
A better solution is to create an artificial test component that demonstrates all ways to apply the directive.
@Component({ imports: [Highlight], template: ` <h2 highlight="yellow">Something Yellow</h2> <h2 highlight>The Default (Gray)</h2> <h2>No Highlight</h2> <input #box [highlight]="box.value" value="cyan" /> `,})class Test {}
HELPFUL: The <input> case binds the Highlight to the name of a color value in the input box.
The initial value is the word "cyan" which should be the background color of the input box.
Here are some tests of this component:
let fixture: ComponentFixture<Test>;let des: DebugElement[]; // the three elements w/ the directivebeforeEach(async () => { fixture = TestBed.createComponent(Test); await fixture.whenStable(); // all elements with an attached Highlight des = fixture.debugElement.queryAll(By.directive(Highlight));});// color testsit('should have three highlighted elements', () => { expect(des.length).toBe(3);});it('should color 1st <h2> background "yellow"', () => { const bgColor = des[0].nativeElement.style.backgroundColor; expect(bgColor).toBe('yellow');});it('should color 2nd <h2> background w/ default color', () => { const dir = des[1].injector.get(Highlight); const bgColor = des[1].nativeElement.style.backgroundColor; expect(bgColor).toBe(dir.defaultColor);});it('should bind <input> background to value color', async () => { // easier to work with nativeElement const input = des[2].nativeElement as HTMLInputElement; expect(input.style.backgroundColor, 'initial backgroundColor').toBe('cyan'); input.value = 'green'; // Dispatch a DOM event so that Angular responds to the input value change. input.dispatchEvent(new Event('input')); await fixture.whenStable(); expect(input.style.backgroundColor, 'changed backgroundColor').toBe('green');});it('bare <h2> should not have a backgroundColor', () => { // the h2 without the Highlight directive const bareH2 = fixture.debugElement.query(By.css('h2:not([highlight])')); expect(bareH2.styles.backgroundColor).toBeUndefined();});
A few techniques are noteworthy:
The
By.directivepredicate is a great way to get the elements that have this directive when their element types are unknownThe
:notpseudo-class inBy.css('h2:not([highlight])')helps find<h2>elements that do not have the directive.By.css('*:not([highlight])')finds any element that does not have the directive.DebugElement.stylesaffords access to element styles even in the absence of a real browser, thanks to theDebugElementabstraction. But feel free to exploit thenativeElementwhen that seems easier or more clear than the abstraction.Angular adds a directive to the injector of the element to which it is applied. The test for the default color uses the injector of the second
<h2>to get itsHighlightinstance and itsdefaultColor.DebugElement.propertiesaffords access to the artificial custom property that is set by the directive