Home Web Front-end JS Tutorial Jest Recap: What Runs When?

Jest Recap: What Runs When?

Jul 19, 2024 pm 03:59 PM

Jest Recap: What Runs When?

TL;DR: Execution Order

  1. Everything on the top-level and in describe() blocks (where describe() blocks are basically IIFEs)
  2. beforeAll()
    1. top-level
    2. 1st level describe()
    3. Nth level describe()
  3. beforeEach()
    1. top-level
    2. 1st level describe()
    3. Nth level describe()
  4. test()
  5. afterEach()
    1. Nth level describe()
    2. 1st level describe()
    3. top-level
  6. afterAll()
    1. Nth level describe()
    2. 1st level describe()
    3. top-level

Disclaimer

I assume you have a basic understanding of jest and unit-testing. I will not explain the meaning of the hooks. This is more of cheat-sheet/reference type of post.

There are Rules

At first jest seems to do stuff magically. What gets executed when? But if you think about it for a minute it gets obvious less confusing.

Maybe these simple "rules" help:

  1. Each file is executed independently: nothing you do in A.test.js affects B.test.js. (unless you start to access external resources)
  2. describe() callbacks are executed immediately.
  3. hooks (beforeAll/afterAll, beforeEach/afterEach) are executed from outer scope (top-level/module) to inner scope (describe).

Basic Example

console.log("./<start>");

beforeAll(() => {
    console.log("./beforeAll");
})
beforeEach(() => {
    console.log("./beforeEach");
})
afterAll(() => {
    console.log("./afterAll");
})
afterEach(() => {
    console.log("./afterEach");
})

describe("foo", () => {
    console.log("./describe(foo)/<start>");

    beforeAll(() => {
        console.log("./describe(foo)/beforeAll");
    })
    beforeEach(() => {
        console.log("./describe(foo)/beforeEach");
    })
    afterAll(() => {
        console.log("./describe(foo)/afterAll");
    })
    afterEach(() => {
        console.log("./describe(foo)/afterEach");
    })

    test("testFoo", () => {
        console.log("./describe(foo)/test(testFoo)");
    })

    console.log("./describe(foo)/<end>");
})

describe("bar", () => {
    console.log("./describe(bar)/<start>");

    beforeAll(() => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/beforeAll");
    })
    beforeEach(() => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/beforeEach");
    })
    afterAll(() => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/afterAll");
    })
    afterEach(() => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/afterEach");
    })

    test("testBar", () => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/test(testBar)");
    })
    test("testOtherBar", () => {
        console.log("./describe(bar)/test(testOtherBar)");
    })

    console.log("./describe(bar)/<end>");
})

console.log("./<end>");
Copy after login

This is the result (after I removed other output):

./<start>
./describe(foo)/<start>
./describe(foo)/<end>
./describe(bar)/<start>
./describe(bar)/<end>
./<end>

./beforeAll

./describe(foo)/beforeAll
./beforeEach
./describe(foo)/beforeEach
./describe(foo)/test(testFoo)
./describe(foo)/afterEach
./afterEach
./describe(foo)/afterAll

./describe(bar)/beforeAll
./beforeEach
./describe(bar)/beforeEach
./describe(bar)/test(testBar)
./describe(bar)/afterEach
./afterEach

./beforeEach
./describe(bar)/beforeEach
./describe(bar)/test(testOtherBar)
./describe(bar)/afterEach
./afterEach
./describe(bar)/afterAll

./afterAll
Copy after login

What happens?

Everything on the top-level and in describe callbacks is executed immediately:

./<start>
./describe(foo)/<start>
./describe(foo)/<end>
./describe(bar)/<start>
./describe(bar)/<end>
./<end>
[...]
Copy after login

beforeAll and afterAll on the top-level are a "brace" around all tests. Each executed only once.

[...]

./beforeAll

[...]

./afterAll
Copy after login

./describe(*)/beforeAll and ./describe(*)/afterAll are a brace around all tests in that describe callback. Each executed only once.

[...]

./describe(foo)/beforeAll
[...]
./describe(foo)/afterAll

./describe(bar)/beforeAll
[...]
./describe(bar)/afterAll

[...]
Copy after login

beforeEach and afterEach are a braces around each test. The top-level is the outer brace. The describe level is the inner brace.

[...]
./beforeEach
./describe(*)/beforeEach
[...]
./describe(*)/afterEach
./afterEach
[...]
Copy after login

Advanced Version

This is an advanced example with a nested describe block. It produces XMLish results to emphasize the hierarchical nature of the execution steps.

console.log("<top-level>");

beforeAll(() => {
    console.log("<all>");
})
beforeEach(() => {
    console.log("<each>");
})
afterAll(() => {
    console.log("</all>");
})
afterEach(() => {
    console.log("</each>");
})

describe("foo", () => {
    console.log("<describe id=\"foo\">");

    beforeAll(() => {
        console.log("<all in=\"foo\">");
    })
    beforeEach(() => {
        console.log("<each in=\"foo\">");
    })
    afterAll(() => {
        console.log("</all>  <!-- in=\"foo\" -->");
    })
    afterEach(() => {
        console.log("</each>  <!-- in=\"foo\" -->");
    })

    test("testFoo", () => {
        console.log("<test in=\"foo\" id=\"testFoo\" />");
    })

    console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"foo\" -->");
})

describe("bar", () => {
    describe("barinner", () => {
        console.log("<describe id=\"barinner\">");

        beforeAll(() => {
            console.log("<all in=\"barinner\">");
        })
        beforeEach(() => {
            console.log("<each in=\"barinner\">");
        })
        afterAll(() => {
            console.log("</all> <!-- in=\"barinner\" -->");
        })
        afterEach(() => {
            console.log("</each> <!-- in=\"barinner\" -->");
        })

        test("testBarInner", () => {
            console.log("<test in=\"barinner\" id=\"testBarInner\" />");
        })

        console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"barinner\" -->");
    })

    console.log("<describe id=\"bar\">");

    beforeAll(() => {
        console.log("<all in=\"bar\">");
    })
    beforeEach(() => {
        console.log("<each in=\"bar\">");
    })
    afterAll(() => {
        console.log("</all> <!-- in=\"bar\" -->");
    })
    afterEach(() => {
        console.log("</each> <!-- in=\"bar\" -->");
    })

    test("testBar", () => {
        console.log("<test in=\"bar\" id=\"testBar\" />");
    })
    test("testOtherBar", () => {
        console.log("<test in=\"bar\" id=\"testOtherBar\" />");
    })

    console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"bar\" -->");
})

console.log("</top-level>");
Copy after login

This is the output after some cleanup and formatting:

<top-level>
    <describe id="foo">
    </describe> <!-- id="foo" -->

    <describe id="barinner">
    </describe> <!-- id="barinner" -->

    <describe id="bar">
    </describe> <!-- id="bar" -->
</top-level>

<all>
    <all in="foo">
        <each>
            <each in="foo">
                <test in="foo" id="testFoo" />
            </each>  <!-- in="foo" -->
        </each>
    </all>  <!-- in="foo" -->
    <all in="bar">
        <all in="barinner">
            <each>
                <each in="bar">
                    <each in="barinner">
                        <test in="barinner" id="testBarInner" />
                    </each> <!-- in="barinner" -->
                </each> <!-- in="bar" -->
            </each>
        </all> <!-- in="barinner" -->
        <each>
            <each in="bar">
                <test in="bar" id="testBar" />
            </each> <!-- in="bar" -->
        </each>
        <each>
            <each in="bar">
                <test in="bar" id="otherBar" />
            </each> <!-- in="bar" -->
        </each>
    </all> <!-- in="bar" -->
</all>
Copy after login

That's all there is to know about the execution order.

The above is the detailed content of Jest Recap: What Runs When?. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

Statement of this Website
The content of this article is voluntarily contributed by netizens, and the copyright belongs to the original author. This site does not assume corresponding legal responsibility. If you find any content suspected of plagiarism or infringement, please contact admin@php.cn

Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress

Undresser.AI Undress

AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover

AI Clothes Remover

Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool

Undress AI Tool

Undress images for free

Clothoff.io

Clothoff.io

AI clothes remover

Video Face Swap

Video Face Swap

Swap faces in any video effortlessly with our completely free AI face swap tool!

Hot Tools

Notepad++7.3.1

Notepad++7.3.1

Easy-to-use and free code editor

SublimeText3 Chinese version

SublimeText3 Chinese version

Chinese version, very easy to use

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Powerful PHP integrated development environment

Dreamweaver CS6

Dreamweaver CS6

Visual web development tools

SublimeText3 Mac version

SublimeText3 Mac version

God-level code editing software (SublimeText3)

Hot Topics

Java Tutorial
1664
14
PHP Tutorial
1268
29
C# Tutorial
1246
24
The Evolution of JavaScript: Current Trends and Future Prospects The Evolution of JavaScript: Current Trends and Future Prospects Apr 10, 2025 am 09:33 AM

The latest trends in JavaScript include the rise of TypeScript, the popularity of modern frameworks and libraries, and the application of WebAssembly. Future prospects cover more powerful type systems, the development of server-side JavaScript, the expansion of artificial intelligence and machine learning, and the potential of IoT and edge computing.

JavaScript Engines: Comparing Implementations JavaScript Engines: Comparing Implementations Apr 13, 2025 am 12:05 AM

Different JavaScript engines have different effects when parsing and executing JavaScript code, because the implementation principles and optimization strategies of each engine differ. 1. Lexical analysis: convert source code into lexical unit. 2. Grammar analysis: Generate an abstract syntax tree. 3. Optimization and compilation: Generate machine code through the JIT compiler. 4. Execute: Run the machine code. V8 engine optimizes through instant compilation and hidden class, SpiderMonkey uses a type inference system, resulting in different performance performance on the same code.

Python vs. JavaScript: The Learning Curve and Ease of Use Python vs. JavaScript: The Learning Curve and Ease of Use Apr 16, 2025 am 12:12 AM

Python is more suitable for beginners, with a smooth learning curve and concise syntax; JavaScript is suitable for front-end development, with a steep learning curve and flexible syntax. 1. Python syntax is intuitive and suitable for data science and back-end development. 2. JavaScript is flexible and widely used in front-end and server-side programming.

JavaScript: Exploring the Versatility of a Web Language JavaScript: Exploring the Versatility of a Web Language Apr 11, 2025 am 12:01 AM

JavaScript is the core language of modern web development and is widely used for its diversity and flexibility. 1) Front-end development: build dynamic web pages and single-page applications through DOM operations and modern frameworks (such as React, Vue.js, Angular). 2) Server-side development: Node.js uses a non-blocking I/O model to handle high concurrency and real-time applications. 3) Mobile and desktop application development: cross-platform development is realized through ReactNative and Electron to improve development efficiency.

How to Build a Multi-Tenant SaaS Application with Next.js (Frontend Integration) How to Build a Multi-Tenant SaaS Application with Next.js (Frontend Integration) Apr 11, 2025 am 08:22 AM

This article demonstrates frontend integration with a backend secured by Permit, building a functional EdTech SaaS application using Next.js. The frontend fetches user permissions to control UI visibility and ensures API requests adhere to role-base

Building a Multi-Tenant SaaS Application with Next.js (Backend Integration) Building a Multi-Tenant SaaS Application with Next.js (Backend Integration) Apr 11, 2025 am 08:23 AM

I built a functional multi-tenant SaaS application (an EdTech app) with your everyday tech tool and you can do the same. First, what’s a multi-tenant SaaS application? Multi-tenant SaaS applications let you serve multiple customers from a sing

From C/C   to JavaScript: How It All Works From C/C to JavaScript: How It All Works Apr 14, 2025 am 12:05 AM

The shift from C/C to JavaScript requires adapting to dynamic typing, garbage collection and asynchronous programming. 1) C/C is a statically typed language that requires manual memory management, while JavaScript is dynamically typed and garbage collection is automatically processed. 2) C/C needs to be compiled into machine code, while JavaScript is an interpreted language. 3) JavaScript introduces concepts such as closures, prototype chains and Promise, which enhances flexibility and asynchronous programming capabilities.

JavaScript and the Web: Core Functionality and Use Cases JavaScript and the Web: Core Functionality and Use Cases Apr 18, 2025 am 12:19 AM

The main uses of JavaScript in web development include client interaction, form verification and asynchronous communication. 1) Dynamic content update and user interaction through DOM operations; 2) Client verification is carried out before the user submits data to improve the user experience; 3) Refreshless communication with the server is achieved through AJAX technology.

See all articles