Getting Started
Install Jest using your favorite package manager:
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev jest
yarn add --dev jest
pnpm add --save-dev jest
Let's get started by writing a test for a hypothetical function that adds two numbers. First, create a sum.js
file:
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
module.exports = sum;
Then, create a file named sum.test.js
. This will contain our actual test:
const sum = require('./sum');
test('adds 1 + 2 to equal 3', () => {
expect(sum(1, 2)).toBe(3);
});
Add the following section to your package.json
:
{
"scripts": {
"test": "jest"
}
}
Finally, run yarn test
or npm test
and Jest will print this message:
PASS ./sum.test.js
✓ adds 1 + 2 to equal 3 (5ms)
You just successfully wrote your first test using Jest!
This test used expect
and toBe
to test that two values were exactly identical. To learn about the other things that Jest can test, see Using Matchers.
Running from command line
You can run Jest directly from the CLI (if it's globally available in your PATH
, e.g. by yarn global add jest
or npm install jest --global
) with a variety of useful options.
Here's how to run Jest on files matching my-test
, using config.json
as a configuration file and display a native OS notification after the run:
jest my-test --notify --config=config.json
If you'd like to learn more about running jest
through the command line, take a look at the Jest CLI Options page.
Additional Configuration
Generate a basic configuration file
Based on your project, Jest will ask you a few questions and will create a basic configuration file with a short description for each option:
jest --init
Using Babel
To use Babel, install required dependencies:
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev babel-jest @babel/core @babel/preset-env
yarn add --dev babel-jest @babel/core @babel/preset-env
pnpm add --save-dev babel-jest @babel/core @babel/preset-env
Configure Babel to target your current version of Node by creating a babel.config.js
file in the root of your project:
module.exports = {
presets: [['@babel/preset-env', {targets: {node: 'current'}}]],
};
The ideal configuration for Babel will depend on your project. See Babel's docs for more details.
Making your Babel config jest-aware
Jest will set process.env.NODE_ENV
to 'test'
if it's not set to something else. You can use that in your configuration to conditionally setup only the compilation needed for Jest, e.g.
module.exports = api => {
const isTest = api.env('test');
// You can use isTest to determine what presets and plugins to use.
return {
// ...
};
};
babel-jest
is automatically installed when installing Jest and will automatically transform files if a babel configuration exists in your project. To avoid this behavior, you can explicitly reset the transform
configuration option:
module.exports = {
transform: {},
};
Using webpack
Jest can be used in projects that use webpack to manage assets, styles, and compilation. webpack does offer some unique challenges over other tools. Refer to the webpack guide to get started.
Using Vite
Jest can be used in projects that use vite to serve source code over native ESM to provide some frontend tooling, vite is an opinionated tool and does offer some out-of-the box workflows. Jest is not fully supported by vite due to how the plugin system from vite works, but there are some working examples for first-class jest integration using vite-jest
, since this is not fully supported, you might as well read the limitation of the vite-jest
. Refer to the vite guide to get started.
Using Parcel
Jest can be used in projects that use parcel-bundler to manage assets, styles, and compilation similar to webpack. Parcel requires zero configuration. Refer to the official docs to get started.
Using TypeScript
Via babel
Jest supports TypeScript, via Babel. First, make sure you followed the instructions on using Babel above. Next, install the @babel/preset-typescript
:
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev @babel/preset-typescript
yarn add --dev @babel/preset-typescript
pnpm add --save-dev @babel/preset-typescript
Then add @babel/preset-typescript
to the list of presets in your babel.config.js
.
module.exports = {
presets: [
['@babel/preset-env', {targets: {node: 'current'}}],
'@babel/preset-typescript',
],
};
However, there are some caveats to using TypeScript with Babel. Because TypeScript support in Babel is purely transpilation, Jest will not type-check your tests as they are run. If you want that, you can use ts-jest instead, or just run the TypeScript compiler tsc separately (or as part of your build process).
Via ts-jest
ts-jest is a TypeScript preprocessor with source map support for Jest that lets you use Jest to test projects written in TypeScript.
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev ts-jest
yarn add --dev ts-jest
pnpm add --save-dev ts-jest
In order for Jest to transpile TypeScript with ts-jest
, you may also need to create a configuration file.
Type definitions
There are two ways to have Jest global APIs typed for test files written in TypeScript.
You can use type definitions which ships with Jest and will update each time you update Jest. Install the @jest/globals
package:
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev @jest/globals
yarn add --dev @jest/globals
pnpm add --save-dev @jest/globals
And import the APIs from it:
import {describe, expect, test} from '@jest/globals';
import {sum} from './sum';
describe('sum module', () => {
test('adds 1 + 2 to equal 3', () => {
expect(sum(1, 2)).toBe(3);
});
});
See the additional usage documentation of describe.each
/test.each
and mock functions
.
Or you may choose to install the @types/jest
package. It provides types for Jest globals without a need to import them.
- npm
- Yarn
- pnpm
npm install --save-dev @types/jest
yarn add --dev @types/jest
pnpm add --save-dev @types/jest
@types/jest
is a third party library maintained at DefinitelyTyped, hence the latest Jest features or versions may not be covered yet. Try to match versions of Jest and @types/jest
as closely as possible. For example, if you are using Jest 27.4.0
then installing 27.4.x
of @types/jest
is ideal.
Using ESLint
Jest can be used with ESLint without any further configuration as long as you import the Jest global helpers (describe
, it
, etc.) from @jest/globals
before using them in your test file. This is necessary to avoid no-undef
errors from ESLint, which doesn't know about the Jest globals.
If you'd like to avoid these imports, you can configure your ESLint environment to support these globals by adding the jest
environment:
{
"overrides": [
{
"files": ["tests/**/*"],
"env": {
"jest": true
}
}
]
}
Or use eslint-plugin-jest
, which has a similar effect:
{
"overrides": [
{
"files": ["tests/**/*"],
"plugins": ["jest"],
"env": {
"jest/globals": true
}
}
]
}