Testing
Components using Trans
or useLingui
require access to the context of I18nProvider
. How you can wrap your component with the I18nProvider depends on the test library you use.
Here is a working example with react-testing-library, using the wrapper-property:
index.js
import React from 'react'
import { getByText, render, act } from '@testing-library/react'
import { i18n } from '@lingui/core'
import { I18nProvider } from '@lingui/react'
import { messages } from './locales/en/messages'
import { messages as csMessages } from './locales/cs/messages'
import App from './App'
i18n.load({
en: messages,
cs: csMessages
})
const TestingProvider = ({ children }: any) => (
<I18nProvider i18n={i18n}>
{children}
</I18nProvider>
)
test('Content should be translated correctly in English' , () => {
act(() => {
i18n.activate('en')
})
const { getByTestId, container } = render(<App />, { wrapper: TestingProvider });
expect(getByTestId('h3-title')).toBeInTheDocument()
expect(getByText(container, "Language switcher example:")).toBeDefined()
});
test('Content should be translated correctly in Czech', () => {
act(() => {
i18n.activate('cs')
})
const { getByTestId, container } = render(<App />, { wrapper: TestingProvider });
expect(getByTestId('h3-title')).toBeInTheDocument()
expect(getByText(container, "Příklad přepínače jazyků:")).toBeDefined()
});
You could define a custom renderer to re-use this TestingProvider, see react testing library - Custom Render