Slots
Vue Test Utils provides some useful features for testing components using slots
.
A Simple Example
You might have a generic <layout>
component that uses a default slot to render some content. For example:
const Layout = {
template: `
<div>
<h1>Welcome!</h1>
<main>
<slot />
</main>
<footer>
Thanks for visiting.
</footer>
</div>
`
}
You might want to write a test to ensure the default slot content is rendered. VTU provides the slots
mounting option for this purpose:
test('layout default slot', () => {
const wrapper = mount(Layout, {
slots: {
default: 'Main Content'
}
})
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('Main Content')
})
It passes! In this example, we are passing some text content to the default slot. If you want to be even more specific, and verify the default slot content is rendered inside <main>
, you could change the assertion:
test('layout default slot', () => {
const wrapper = mount(Layout, {
slots: {
default: 'Main Content'
}
})
expect(wrapper.find('main').text()).toContain('Main Content')
})
Named Slots
You may have more complex <layout>
component with some named slots. For example:
const Layout = {
template: `
<div>
<header>
<slot name="header" />
</header>
<main>
<slot name="main" />
</main>
<footer>
<slot name="footer" />
</footer>
</div>
`
}
VTU also supports this. You can write a test as follows. Note that in this example we are passing HTML instead of text content to the slots.
test('layout full page layout', () => {
const wrapper = mount(Layout, {
slots: {
header: '<div>Header</div>',
main: '<div>Main Content</div>',
footer: '<div>Footer</div>'
}
})
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Header</div>')
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Main Content</div>')
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Footer</div>')
})
Multiple Slots
You can pass an array of slots, too:
test('layout full page layout', () => {
const wrapper = mount(Layout, {
slots: {
default: [
'<div id="one">One</div>',
'<div id="two">Two</div>'
]
}
})
expect(wrapper.find('#one').exists()).toBe(true)
expect(wrapper.find('#two').exists()).toBe(true)
})
Advanced Usage
You can also pass a render function, an object with template or even an SFC imported from a vue
file to a slot mounting option:
import { h } from 'vue'
import Header from './Header.vue'
test('layout full page layout', () => {
const wrapper = mount(Layout, {
slots: {
header: Header,
main: h('div', 'Main Content'),
sidebar: { template: '<div>Sidebar</div>' },
footer: '<div>Footer</div>'
}
})
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Header</div>')
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Main Content</div>')
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('<div>Footer</div>')
})
Refer to the tests for more examples and use cases.
Scoped Slots
Scoped slots and bindings are also supported.
const ComponentWithSlots = {
template: `
<div class="scoped">
<slot name="scoped" v-bind="{ msg }" />
</div>
`,
data() {
return {
msg: 'world'
}
}
}
test('scoped slots', () => {
const wrapper = mount(ComponentWithSlots, {
slots: {
scoped: `<template #scoped="scope">
Hello {{ scope.msg }}
</template>
`
}
})
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('Hello world')
})
When using string templates for slot content, if not explicitly defined using a wrapping <template #scoped="scopeVar">
tag, slot scope becomes available as a params
object when the slot is evaluated.
test('scoped slots', () => {
const wrapper = mount(ComponentWithSlots, {
slots: {
scoped: `Hello {{ params.msg }}` // no wrapping template tag provided, slot scope exposed as "params"
}
})
expect(wrapper.html()).toContain('Hello world')
})
Conclusion
- Use the
slots
mounting option to test components using<slot>
are rendering content correctly. - Content can either be a string, a render function or an imported SFC.
- Use
default
for the default slot, and the correct name for a named slots. - scoped slots and the
#
shorthand is also supported.