Files
react/packages/react-test-renderer
Sebastian Markbåge e3f191803c [Fiber] Adjust the suspensey image/css timeout based on already elapsed time (#34478)
Currently suspensey images doesn't account for how long we've already
been waiting. This means that you can for example wait for 300ms for the
throttle + 500ms for the images. If a Transition takes a while to
complete you can also wait that time + an additional 500ms for the
images.

This tracks the start time of a Transition so that we can count the
timeout starting from when the user interacted or when the last fallback
committed (which is where the 300ms throttle is computed from). Creating
a single timeline.

This also moves the timeout to a central place which I'll use in a
follow up.
2025-09-15 16:05:20 -04:00
..
2024-04-02 11:41:31 -04:00

react-test-renderer (DEPRECATED)

Deprecation notice

react-test-renderer is deprecated and no longer maintained. It will be removed in a future version. As of React 19, you will see a console warning when invoking ReactTestRenderer.create().

React Testing

This library creates a contrived environment and its APIs encourage introspection on React's internals, which may change without notice causing broken tests. It is instead recommended to use browser-based environments such as jsdom and standard DOM APIs for your assertions.

The React team recommends @testing-library/react as a modern alternative that uses standard APIs, avoids internals, and promotes best practices.

React Native Testing

The React team recommends @testing-library/react-native as a replacement for react-test-renderer for native integration tests. This React Native testing-library variant follows the same API design as described above and promotes better testing patterns.

Documentation

This package provides an experimental React renderer that can be used to render React components to pure JavaScript objects, without depending on the DOM or a native mobile environment.

Essentially, this package makes it easy to grab a snapshot of the "DOM tree" rendered by a React DOM or React Native component without using a browser or jsdom.

Documentation: https://reactjs.org/docs/test-renderer.html

Usage:

const ReactTestRenderer = require('react-test-renderer');

const renderer = ReactTestRenderer.create(
  <Link page="https://www.facebook.com/">Facebook</Link>
);

console.log(renderer.toJSON());
// { type: 'a',
//   props: { href: 'https://www.facebook.com/' },
//   children: [ 'Facebook' ] }

You can also use Jest's snapshot testing feature to automatically save a copy of the JSON tree to a file and check in your tests that it hasn't changed: https://jestjs.io/blog/2016/07/27/jest-14.html.