Snapshot testing allows you to perform assertions without having to write the
expectation yourself. Birdie will store a snapshot of the expected value and
compare future runs of the same test against it. Imagine doing a
should.equal(expected, got)
where you don't have to take care of writing the
expected output.
First you'll want to add the package to your dependencies:
gleam add --dev birdie
To write snapshot tests you can import the birdie
module and use the
snap
function:
import gleeunit
import birdie
pub fn main() {
gleeunit.main()
}
pub fn hello_birdie_test() {
"π¦ββ¬ Smile for the birdie!"
|> birdie.snap(title: "my first snapshot")
// All snapshots must have a unique title!
}
This will record a new snapshot with the given title and content. A snapshot test will always fail on its first run until you review and accept it. Once you've reviewed and accepted a snapshot, the test will fail only if the snapshot's content changes; in that case you will be presented with a diff and asked to review it once again.
A typical workflow will look like this:
- Run your tests
- If you have any new snapshots - or some of the snapshots have changed - some tests will fail
- Review all the new snapshots deciding if you want to keep the new version or the previously accepted one
- And don't forget to commit your snapshots! Those should be treated like code and checked with the vcs you're using
Birdie also provides a CLI tool to help you in the review process: run
gleam run -m birdie
in your project and birdie will help you interactively
review all your new snapshots.
The CLI tool can also do more than just guide you through all your snapshots one by one. To check all the available options you can run
gleam run -m birdie help
A good idea is to give snapshots long descriptive titles that clearly state what you're expecting to see when reviewing those. Also all snapshots must have unique names so that birdie won't mix those up, so be careful when naming snapshots to not repeat the same title twice!
During the review process, Birdie will try to be helpful and show you an error message if it can spot two tests that happen to share the same exact title. It will only work for snapshots that have a literal string as a title but it can be really helpful to spot some of those confusing bugs!
My recommendation is strive to have small and cohesive snapshots. Each snapshot test should test one thing and one thing only. Having small snapshots will make your life way easier during the review process! It's better to review 10 small snpashots than a single huge one and you'll see better, more focused diffs.
Birdie will only ever accept String
values and it's up to you to turn your
own Gleam types into a String
before snapping those: this way you have total
freedom and will be able to choose a format that makes sense to you and makes
things easier to review!
If you don't want to write serialisers for yourself and are ok with a default
look then I recommend you try using the pprint
package.
It's an awesome package that can turn any Gleam type into a pretty string that
will work perfectly with Birdie and produce nice diffs out of the box.
I'm sure most of the times you won't feel the need to use anything else!
import birdie
import pprint
pub fn a_snapshot_test() {
Ok([1, 2, 3])
|> pprint.format
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
// pprint does all the hard work of turning
// any value into a pretty string!
|> birdie.snap(title: "a snapshot test using pprint's output")
}
This package was heavily inspired by the excellent Rust library
insta
, do check it out!
If you think there's any way to improve this package, or if you spot a bug don't be afraid to open PRs, issues or requests of any kind! Any contribution is welcome π