View Source Phoenix.LiveViewTest (Phoenix LiveView v0.17.9)
Conveniences for testing Phoenix LiveViews.
In LiveView tests, we interact with views via process communication in substitution of a browser. Like a browser, our test process receives messages about the rendered updates from the view which can be asserted against to test the life-cycle and behavior of LiveViews and their children.
liveview-testing
LiveView Testing
The life-cycle of a LiveView as outlined in the Phoenix.LiveView
docs details how a view starts as a stateless HTML render in a disconnected
socket state. Once the browser receives the HTML, it connects to the
server and a new LiveView process is started, remounted in a connected
socket state, and the view continues statefully. The LiveView test functions
support testing both disconnected and connected mounts separately, for example:
import Plug.Conn
import Phoenix.ConnTest
import Phoenix.LiveViewTest
@endpoint MyEndpoint
test "disconnected and connected mount", %{conn: conn} do
conn = get(conn, "/my-path")
assert html_response(conn, 200) =~ "<h1>My Disconnected View</h1>"
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn)
end
test "redirected mount", %{conn: conn} do
assert {:error, {:redirect, %{to: "/somewhere"}}} = live(conn, "my-path")
end
Here, we start by using the familiar Phoenix.ConnTest
function, get/2
to
test the regular HTTP GET request which invokes mount with a disconnected socket.
Next, live/1
is called with our sent connection to mount the view in a connected
state, which starts our stateful LiveView process.
In general, it's often more convenient to test the mounting of a view
in a single step, provided you don't need the result of the stateless HTTP
render. This is done with a single call to live/2
, which performs the
get
step for us:
test "connected mount", %{conn: conn} do
{:ok, _view, html} = live(conn, "/my-path")
assert html =~ "<h1>My Connected View</h1>"
end
testing-events
Testing Events
The browser can send a variety of events to a LiveView via phx-
bindings,
which are sent to the handle_event/3
callback. To test events sent by the
browser and assert on the rendered side effect of the event, use the
render_*
functions:
render_click/1
- sends a phx-click event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_focus/2
- sends a phx-focus event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_blur/1
- sends a phx-blur event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_submit/1
- sends a form phx-submit event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_change/1
- sends a form phx-change event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_keydown/1
- sends a form phx-keydown event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_keyup/1
- sends a form phx-keyup event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.render_hook/3
- sends a hook event and value, returning the rendered result of thehandle_event/3
callback.
For example:
{:ok, view, _html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("button#inc")
|> render_click() =~ "The temperature is: 31℉"
In the example above, we are looking for a particular element on the page and triggering its phx-click event. LiveView takes care of making sure the element has a phx-click and automatically sends its values to the server.
You can also bypass the element lookup and directly trigger the LiveView event in most functions:
assert render_click(view, :inc, %{}) =~ "The temperature is: 31℉"
The element
style is preferred as much as possible, as it helps LiveView
perform validations and ensure the events in the HTML actually matches the
event names on the server.
testing-regular-messages
Testing regular messages
LiveViews are GenServer
's under the hood, and can send and receive messages
just like any other server. To test the side effects of sending or receiving
messages, simply message the view and use the render
function to test the
result:
send(view.pid, {:set_temp, 50})
assert render(view) =~ "The temperature is: 50℉"
testing-function-components
Testing function components
There are two mechanisms for testing function components. Imagine the following component:
def greet(assigns) do
~H"""
<div>Hello, <%= @name %>!</div>
"""
end
You can test it by using render_component/3
, passing the function
reference to the component as first argument:
import Phoenix.LiveViewTest
test "greets" do
assert render_component(&MyComponents.greet/1, name: "Mary") ==
"<div>Hello, Mary!</div>"
end
However, for complex components, often the simplest way to test them
is by using the ~H
sigil itself:
import Phoenix.LiveView.Helpers
import Phoenix.LiveViewTest
test "greets" do
assigns = []
assert rendered_to_string(~H"""
<MyComponents.greet name="Mary" />
""") ==
"<div>Hello, Mary!</div>"
end
The difference is that we use rendered_to_string
to convert the rendered
template to a string for testing.
testing-stateful-components
Testing stateful components
There are two main mechanisms for testing stateful components. You can
use render_component/2
to test how a component is mounted and rendered
once:
assert render_component(MyComponent, id: 123, user: %User{}) =~
"some markup in component"
However, if you want to test how components are mounted by a LiveView
and interact with DOM events, you must use the regular live/2
macro
to build the LiveView with the component and then scope events by
passing the view and a DOM selector in a list:
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/users")
html = view |> element("#user-13 a", "Delete") |> render_click()
refute html =~ "user-13"
refute view |> element("#user-13") |> has_element?()
In the example above, LiveView will lookup for an element with
ID=user-13 and retrieve its phx-target
. If phx-target
points
to a component, that will be the component used, otherwise it will
fallback to the view.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Asserts a live patch will happen within timeout
milliseconds. The default
timeout
is 100.
Asserts a live patch will happen to a given path within timeout
milliseconds. The default timeout
is 100.
Asserts a live patch was performed, and returns the new path.
Asserts an event will be pushed within timeout
.
Asserts a redirect will happen within timeout
milliseconds.
The default timeout
is 100.
Asserts a redirect will happen to a given path within timeout
milliseconds.
The default timeout
is 100.
Asserts a redirect was performed.
Asserts a hook reply was returned from a handle_event
callback.
Returns an element to scope a function to.
Builds a file input for testing uploads within a form.
Gets the nested LiveView child by child_id
from the parent
LiveView.
Follows the redirect from a render_*
action or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
Receives a form_element
and asserts that phx-trigger-action
has been
set to true, following up on that request.
Returns a form element to scope a function to.
Checks if the given element exists on the page.
Checks if the given selector
with text_filter
is on view
.
Spawns a connected LiveView process.
Returns the current list of LiveView children for the parent
LiveView.
Spawns a connected LiveView process mounted in isolation as the sole rendered element.
Performs a live redirect from one LiveView to another.
Open the default browser to display current HTML of view_or_element
.
Returns the most recent title that was updated via a page_title
assign.
Performs a preflight upload request.
Puts connect params to be used on LiveView connections.
Refutes a redirect to a given path was performed.
Returns the HTML string of the rendered view or element.
Sends a blur event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a blur event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Sends a form change event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a form change event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Sends a click event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a click event
to the view
with value
and returns the rendered result.
Renders a component.
Sends a focus event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a focus event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Sends a hook event to the view or an element and returns the rendered result.
Sends a keydown event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a keydown event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Sends a keyup event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a keyup event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Simulates a live_patch
to the given path
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a form submit event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a form submit event to the view and returns the rendered result.
Performs an upload of a file input and renders the result.
Converts a rendered template to a string.
Sets the target of the view for events.
Link to this section Functions
Asserts a live patch will happen within timeout
milliseconds. The default
timeout
is 100.
It returns the new path.
To assert on the flash message, you can assert on the result of the rendered LiveView.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_patch)
assert_patch view
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_patch)
assert_patch view, 30
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_patch)
path = assert_patch view
assert path =~ ~r/path/+/
Asserts a live patch will happen to a given path within timeout
milliseconds. The default timeout
is 100.
It always returns :ok
.
To assert on the flash message, you can assert on the result of the rendered LiveView.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_patch)
assert_patch view, "/path"
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_patch)
assert_patch view, "/path", 30
Asserts a live patch was performed, and returns the new path.
To assert on the flash message, you can assert on the result of the rendered LiveView.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
assert_patched view, "/path"
Asserts an event will be pushed within timeout
.
examples
Examples
assert_push_event view, "scores", %{points: 100, user: "josé"}
Asserts a redirect will happen within timeout
milliseconds.
The default timeout
is 100.
It returns a tuple containing the new path and the flash messages from said redirect, if any. Note the flash will contain string keys.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
{path, flash} = assert_redirect view
assert flash["info"] == "Welcome"
assert path =~ ~r/path\/\d+/
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
assert_redirect view, 30
Asserts a redirect will happen to a given path within timeout
milliseconds.
The default timeout
is 100.
It returns the flash messages from said redirect, if any. Note the flash will contain string keys.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
flash = assert_redirect view, "/path"
assert flash["info"] == "Welcome"
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
assert_redirect view, "/path", 30
Asserts a redirect was performed.
It returns the flash messages from said redirect, if any. Note the flash will contain string keys.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect)
flash = assert_redirected view, "/path"
assert flash["info"] == "Welcome"
Asserts a hook reply was returned from a handle_event
callback.
examples
Examples
assert_reply view, %{result: "ok", transaction_id: _}
Returns an element to scope a function to.
It expects the current LiveView, a query selector, and a text filter.
An optional text filter may be given to filter the results by the query selector. If the text filter is a string or a regex, it will match any element that contains the string (including as a substring) or matches the regex.
So a link containing the text "unopened" will match element("a", "opened")
.
To prevent this, a regex could specify that "opened" appear without the prefix "un".
For example, element("a", ~r{(?<!un)opened})
.
But it may be clearer to add an HTML attribute to make the element easier to
select.
After the text filter is applied, only one element must remain, otherwise an error is raised.
If no text filter is given, then the query selector itself must return a single element.
assert view
|> element("#term a:first-child", "Increment")
|> render() =~ "Increment</a>"
Attribute selectors are also supported, and may be used on special cases like ids which contain periods:
assert view
|> element(~s{[href="/foo"][id="foo.bar.baz"]})
|> render() =~ "Increment</a>"
Builds a file input for testing uploads within a form.
Given the form DOM selector, the upload name, and a list of maps of client metadata
for the upload, the returned file input can be passed to render_upload/2
.
Client metadata takes the following form:
:last_modified
- the last modified timestamp:name
- the name of the file:content
- the binary content of the file:size
- the byte size of the content:type
- the MIME type of the file
examples
Examples
avatar = file_input(lv, "#my-form-id", :avatar, [%{
last_modified: 1_594_171_879_000,
name: "myfile.jpeg",
content: File.read!("myfile.jpg"),
size: 1_396_009,
type: "image/jpeg"
}])
assert render_upload(avatar, "myfile.jpeg") =~ "100%"
Gets the nested LiveView child by child_id
from the parent
LiveView.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, _html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert clock_view = find_live_child(view, "clock")
assert render_click(clock_view, :snooze) =~ "snoozing"
Follows the redirect from a render_*
action or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
Imagine you have a LiveView that redirects on a render_click
event. You can make it sure it immediately redirects after the
render_click
action by calling follow_redirect/3
:
live_view
|> render_click("redirect")
|> follow_redirect(conn)
Or in the case of an error tuple:
assert {:error, {:redirect, %{to: "/somewhere"}}} = result = live(conn, "my-path")
{:ok, view, html} = follow_redirect(result, conn)
follow_redirect/3
expects a connection as second argument.
This is the connection that will be used to perform the underlying
request.
If the LiveView redirects with a live redirect, this macro returns
{:ok, live_view, disconnected_html}
with the content of the new
LiveView, the same as the live/3
macro. If the LiveView redirects
with a regular redirect, this macro returns {:ok, conn}
with the
rendered redirected page. In any other case, this macro raises.
Finally, note that you can optionally assert on the path you are being redirected to by passing a third argument:
live_view
|> render_click("redirect")
|> follow_redirect(conn, "/redirected/page")
Receives a form_element
and asserts that phx-trigger-action
has been
set to true, following up on that request.
Imagine you have a LiveView that sends an HTTP form submission. Say that it
sets the phx-trigger-action
to true, as a response to a submit event.
You can follow the trigger action like this:
form = form(live_view, selector, %{"form" => "data"})
# First we submit the form. Optionally verify that phx-trigger-action
# is now part of the form.
assert render_submit(form) =~ ~r/phx-trigger-action/
# Now follow the request made by the form
conn = follow_trigger_action(form, conn)
assert conn.method == "POST"
assert conn.params == %{"form" => "data"}
Returns a form element to scope a function to.
It expects the current LiveView, a query selector, and the form data. The query selector must return a single element.
The form data will be validated directly against the form markup and make sure the data you are changing/submitting actually exists, failing otherwise.
examples
Examples
assert view
|> form("#term", user: %{name: "hello"})
|> render_submit() =~ "Name updated"
This function is meant to mimic what the user can actually do, so you cannot
set hidden input values. However, hidden values can be given when calling
render_submit/2
or render_change/2
, see their docs for examples.
Checks if the given element exists on the page.
examples
Examples
assert view |> element("#some-element") |> has_element?()
Checks if the given selector
with text_filter
is on view
.
See element/3
for more information.
examples
Examples
assert has_element?(view, "#some-element")
Spawns a connected LiveView process.
If a path
is given, then a regular get(conn, path)
is done and the page is upgraded to a LiveView
. If
no path is given, it assumes a previously rendered
%Plug.Conn{}
is given, which will be converted to
a LiveView
immediately.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/path")
assert view.module == MyLive
assert html =~ "the count is 3"
assert {:error, {:redirect, %{to: "/somewhere"}}} = live(conn, "/path")
Returns the current list of LiveView children for the parent
LiveView.
Children are returned in the order they appear in the rendered HTML.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, _html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert [clock_view] = live_children(view)
assert render_click(clock_view, :snooze) =~ "snoozing"
Spawns a connected LiveView process mounted in isolation as the sole rendered element.
Useful for testing LiveViews that are not directly routable, such as those built as small components to be re-used in multiple parents. Testing routable LiveViews is still recommended whenever possible since features such as live navigation require routable LiveViews.
options
Options
:session
- the session to be given to the LiveView
All other options are forwarded to the LiveView for rendering. Refer to
Phoenix.LiveView.Helpers.live_render/3
for a list of supported render
options.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} =
live_isolated(conn, MyAppWeb.ClockLive, session: %{"tz" => "EST"})
Use put_connect_params/2
to put connect params for a call to
Phoenix.LiveView.get_connect_params/1
in Phoenix.LiveView.mount/3
:
{:ok, view, html} =
conn
|> put_connect_params(%{"param" => "value"})
|> live_isolated(AppWeb.ClockLive, session: %{"tz" => "EST"})
Performs a live redirect from one LiveView to another.
When redirecting between two LiveViews of the same live_session
,
mounts the new LiveView and shutsdown the previous one, which
mimics general browser live navigation behaviour.
When attempting to navigate from a LiveView of a different
live_session
, an error redirect condition is returned indicating
a failed live_redirect
from the client.
examples
Examples
assert {:ok, page_live, _html} = live(conn, "/page/1")
assert {:ok, page2_live, _html} = live(conn, "/page/2")
assert {:error, {:redirect, _}} = live_redirect(page2_live, to: "/admin")
open_browser(view_or_element, open_fun \\ &open_with_system_cmd/1)
View SourceOpen the default browser to display current HTML of view_or_element
.
examples
Examples
view
|> element("#term a:first-child", "Increment")
|> open_browser()
assert view
|> form("#term", user: %{name: "hello"})
|> open_browser()
|> render_submit() =~ "Name updated"
Returns the most recent title that was updated via a page_title
assign.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_page_title_update)
assert page_title(view) =~ "my title"
Performs a preflight upload request.
Useful for testing external uploaders to retrieve the :external
entry metadata.
examples
Examples
avatar = file_input(lv, "#my-form-id", :avatar, [%{name: ..., ...}, ...])
assert {:ok, %{ref: _ref, config: %{chunk_size: _}}} = preflight_upload(avatar)
Puts connect params to be used on LiveView connections.
Refutes a redirect to a given path was performed.
It returns :ok if the specified redirect isn't already in the mailbox.
examples
Examples
render_click(view, :event_that_triggers_redirect_to_path)
:ok = refute_redirected view, "/wrong_path"
Returns the HTML string of the rendered view or element.
If a view is provided, the entire LiveView is rendered.
If a view after calling with_target/2
or an element
are given, only that particular context is returned.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, _html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert render(view) =~ ~s|<button id="alarm">Snooze</div>|
assert view
|> element("#alarm")
|> render() == "Snooze"
Sends a blur event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-blur
attribute in it. The event name
given set on phx-blur
is then sent to the appropriate LiveView
(or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values can be given
with the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("#inactive")
|> render_blur() =~ "Tap to wake"
Sends a blur event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_blur(view, :inactive) =~ "Tap to wake"
Sends a form change event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-change
attribute in it. The event name
given set on phx-change
is then sent to the appropriate LiveView
(or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values.
If you need to pass any extra values or metadata, such as the "_target"
parameter, you can do so by giving a map under the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("form")
|> render_change(%{deg: 123}) =~ "123 exceeds limits"
# Passing metadata
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("form")
|> render_change(%{_target: ["deg"], deg: 123}) =~ "123 exceeds limits"
As with render_submit/2
, hidden input field values can be provided like so:
refute view
|> form("#term", user: %{name: "hello"})
|> render_change(%{user: %{"hidden_field" => "example"}}) =~ "can't be blank"
Sends a form change event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_change(view, :validate, %{deg: 123}) =~ "123 exceeds limits"
Sends a click event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-click
attribute in it. The event name
given set on phx-click
is then sent to the appropriate LiveView
(or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values can be given
with the value
argument.
If the element is does not have a phx-click
attribute but it is
a link (the <a>
tag), the link will be followed accordingly:
- if the link is a
live_patch
, the current view will be patched - if the link is a
live_redirect
, this function will return{:error, {:live_redirect, %{to: url}}}
, which can be followed withfollow_redirect/2
- if the link is a regular link, this function will return
{:error, {:redirect, %{to: url}}}
, which can be followed withfollow_redirect/2
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("button", "Increment")
|> render_click() =~ "The temperature is: 30℉"
Sends a click event
to the view
with value
and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temperature is: 30℉"
assert render_click(view, :inc) =~ "The temperature is: 31℉"
render_component(component, assigns \\ Macro.escape(%{}), opts \\ [])
View Source (macro)Renders a component.
The first argument may either be a function component, as an anonymous function:
assert render_component(&Weather.city/1, name: "Kraków") =~
"some markup in component"
Or a stateful component as a module. In this case, this function
will mount, update, and render the component. The :id
option is
a required argument:
assert render_component(MyComponent, id: 123, user: %User{}) =~
"some markup in component"
If your component is using the router, you can pass it as argument:
assert render_component(MyComponent, %{id: 123, user: %User{}}, router: SomeRouter) =~
"some markup in component"
Sends a focus event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-focus
attribute in it. The event name
given set on phx-focus
is then sent to the appropriate LiveView
(or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values can be given
with the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("#inactive")
|> render_focus() =~ "Tap to wake"
Sends a focus event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_focus(view, :inactive) =~ "Tap to wake"
Sends a hook event to the view or an element and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_hook(view, :refresh, %{deg: 32}) =~ "The temp is: 32℉"
If you are pushing events from a hook to a component, then you must pass
an element
, created with element/3
, as first argument and it must point
to a single element on the page with a phx-target
attribute in it:
{:ok, view, _html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("#thermo-component")
|> render_hook(:refresh, %{deg: 32}) =~ "The temp is: 32℉"
Sends a keydown event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single element
on the page with a phx-keydown
or phx-window-keydown
attribute in it.
The event name given set on phx-keydown
is then sent to the appropriate
LiveView (or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values can be given with
the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert view |> element("#inc") |> render_keydown() =~ "The temp is: 31℉"
Sends a keydown event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_keydown(view, :inc) =~ "The temp is: 31℉"
Sends a keyup event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-keyup
or phx-window-keyup
attribute
in it. The event name given set on phx-keyup
is then sent to the
appropriate LiveView (or component if phx-target
is set accordingly).
All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values
can be given with the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert view |> element("#inc") |> render_keyup() =~ "The temp is: 31℉"
Sends a keyup event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_keyup(view, :inc) =~ "The temp is: 31℉"
Simulates a live_patch
to the given path
and returns the rendered result.
Sends a form submit event given by element
and returns the rendered result.
The element
is created with element/3
and must point to a single
element on the page with a phx-submit
attribute in it. The event name
given set on phx-submit
is then sent to the appropriate LiveView
(or component if phx-target
is set accordingly). All phx-value-*
entries in the element are sent as values. Extra values, including hidden
input fields, can be given with the value
argument.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert view
|> element("form")
|> render_submit(%{deg: 123, avatar: upload}) =~ "123 exceeds limits"
To submit a form along with some with hidden input values:
assert view
|> form("#term", user: %{name: "hello"})
|> render_submit(%{user: %{"hidden_field" => "example"}}) =~ "Name updated"
Sends a form submit event to the view and returns the rendered result.
It returns the contents of the whole LiveView or an {:error, redirect}
tuple.
examples
Examples
{:ok, view, html} = live(conn, "/thermo")
assert html =~ "The temp is: 30℉"
assert render_submit(view, :refresh, %{deg: 32}) =~ "The temp is: 32℉"
Performs an upload of a file input and renders the result.
See file_input/4
for details on building a file input.
examples
Examples
Given the following LiveView template:
<%= for entry <- @uploads.avatar.entries do %>
<%= entry.name %>: <%= entry.progress %>%
<% end %>
Your test case can assert the uploaded content:
avatar = file_input(lv, "#my-form-id", :avatar, [
%{
last_modified: 1_594_171_879_000,
name: "myfile.jpeg",
content: File.read!("myfile.jpg"),
size: 1_396_009,
type: "image/jpeg"
}
])
assert render_upload(avatar, "myfile.jpeg") =~ "100%"
By default, the entire file is chunked to the server, but an optional percentage to chunk can be passed to test chunk-by-chunk uploads:
assert render_upload(avatar, "myfile.jpeg", 49) =~ "49%"
assert render_upload(avatar, "myfile.jpeg", 51) =~ "100%"
Converts a rendered template to a string.
examples
Examples
iex> import Phoenix.LiveView.Helpers
iex> assigns = []
iex> ~H"""
...> <div>example</div>
...> """
...> |> rendered_to_string()
"<div>example</div>"
Sets the target of the view for events.
This emulates phx-target
directly in tests, without
having to dispatch the event to a specific element.
This can be useful for invoking events to one or
multiple components at the same time:
view
|> with_target("#user-1,#user-2")
|> render_click("Hide", %{})