🔥 Vue Tips #21: A better way to write tests

michaelthiessen

Michael Thiessen

Posted on August 13, 2021

🔥 Vue Tips #21: A better way to write tests

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🔥 Vue Testing Library

One of my favourite tools for testing is Vue Testing Library:

test('displays correct text', () => {
  const { getByText } = render(MyComponent);
  getByText(/Fail the test if this text doesn't exist/);
})
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It builds on top of vue-test-utils, making it easier to write tests that are closer to how users actually interact with your app.

Users look for specific text, or look for a button to click. They don't look for the nth child of a div with the class .booking-card-container.

Writing tests this way makes them easier to understand, simpler to write, and more robust against changes to your code. Nothing about this test is concerned with the implementation, so it's unlikely to break even under a heavy refactor.

If this idea is new to you, I highly encourage you to read more about the Testing Library guiding principles.

🔥 Creating Grids Without Holes

If you're using CSS grid with different sized items, you'll find that you end up with gaps here and there. You can force the browser to fill those holes:

grid-auto-flow: dense;
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Keep in mind, this will break the ordering of your elements, which also breaks the tab order.

The grid-auto-flow property also takes two other interesting values: row and column. By default it will fill each row one by one, but you can set it to fill by column instead.

You can also combine the two and get a dense column-based ordering!

More details and a good example illustrating how this works on MDN.

đź“ś 25 Vue Tips You Need to Know

I collected 25 of the tips from this newsletter and compiled them into one (long) article. Great for reference or for reading through some tips you may have missed (or forgotten about!).

Surprisingly, it's already become the 9th most popular Vue article on DEV of all time!

25 Vue Tips You Need to Know

đź—ž News: Vue 3.2 Released

The latest version of Vue, Quintessential Quintuplets, was just released this week!

It comes with a ton of performance improvements, pushing Vue towards the top of fastest frameworks. The new v-memo directive helps a lot with that — it's like a computed prop but in your template, and only re-computes when its dependencies change.

This release also includes the stable versions of script setup and reactive style blocks (example borrowed from the article):

<template>
  <button @click="color = color === 'red' ? 'green' : 'red'">
    Color is: {{ color }}
  </button>
</template>

<script setup>
import { ref } from 'vue'

const color = ref('red')
</script>

<style scoped>
button {
  color: v-bind(color);
}
</style>
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There's a lot more in the release announcement.

đź’¬ "Users"

"There are only two industries that refer to their customers as 'users'." — Edward Tufte

🧠 Spaced-repetition: Defining your own utility classes in Tailwind

The best way to commit something to long-term memory is to periodically review it, gradually increasing the time between reviews 👨‍🔬

Actually remembering these tips is much more useful than just a quick distraction, so here's a tip from a couple weeks ago to jog your memory.

One of the best parts of using Tailwind is defining your own utility functions.

I recently needed a negative z-index, but Tailwind doesn't have one, so I created my own:

@layer utilities {
  .-z-1 {
    z-index: -1;
  }
}
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Anything wrapped with @layer utilities { ... } will be picked by Tailwind as a utility class.

If you need to use a custom utility class responsively, you can wrap it in a @variants responsive { ... } block:

@layer utilities {
  @variants responsive {
    .-z-1 {
      z-index: -1;
    }
  }
}
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This lets you write md:-z-1 lg:z-0 and have the utility class respond to screen size.

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michaelthiessen
Michael Thiessen

Posted on August 13, 2021

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