title | description | short-title |
---|---|---|
An introduction to unit testing |
How to write unit tests. |
Introduction |
How can you ensure that your app continues to work as you add more features or change existing functionality? By writing tests.
Unit tests are handy for verifying the behavior of a single function,
method, or class. The test
package provides the
core framework for writing unit tests, and the flutter_test
package provides additional utilities for testing widgets.
This recipe demonstrates the core features provided by the test
package
using the following steps:
- Add the
test
orflutter_test
dependency. - Create a test file.
- Create a class to test.
- Write a
test
for our class. - Combine multiple tests in a
group
. - Run the tests.
For more information about the test package, see the test package documentation.
The test
package provides the core functionality for
writing tests in Dart. This is the best approach when
writing packages consumed by web, server, and Flutter apps.
To add the test
package as a dev dependency,
run flutter pub add
:
$ flutter pub add dev:test
In this example, create two files: counter.dart
and counter_test.dart
.
The counter.dart
file contains a class that you want to test and
resides in the lib
folder. The counter_test.dart
file contains
the tests themselves and lives inside the test
folder.
In general, test files should reside inside a test
folder
located at the root of your Flutter application or package.
Test files should always end with _test.dart
,
this is the convention used by the test runner when searching for tests.
When you're finished, the folder structure should look like this:
counter_app/
lib/
counter.dart
test/
counter_test.dart
Next, you need a "unit" to test. Remember: "unit" is another name for a
function, method, or class. For this example, create a Counter
class
inside the lib/counter.dart
file. It is responsible for incrementing
and decrementing a value
starting at 0
.
class Counter {
int value = 0;
void increment() => value++;
void decrement() => value--;
}
Note: For simplicity, this tutorial does not follow the "Test Driven Development" approach. If you're more comfortable with that style of development, you can always go that route.
Inside the counter_test.dart
file, write the first unit test. Tests are
defined using the top-level test
function, and you can check if the results
are correct by using the top-level expect
function.
Both of these functions come from the test
package.
// Import the test package and Counter class
import 'package:counter_app/counter.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';
void main() {
test('Counter value should be incremented', () {
final counter = Counter();
counter.increment();
expect(counter.value, 1);
});
}
If you want to run a series of related tests,
use the flutter_test
package group
function to categorize the tests.
Once put into a group, you can call flutter test
on all tests in
that group with one command.
import 'package:counter_app/counter.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';
void main() {
group('Test start, increment, decrement', () {
test('value should start at 0', () {
expect(Counter().value, 0);
});
test('value should be incremented', () {
final counter = Counter();
counter.increment();
expect(counter.value, 1);
});
test('value should be decremented', () {
final counter = Counter();
counter.decrement();
expect(counter.value, -1);
});
});
}
Now that you have a Counter
class with tests in place,
you can run the tests.
The Flutter plugins for IntelliJ and VSCode support running tests. This is often the best option while writing tests because it provides the fastest feedback loop as well as the ability to set breakpoints.
-
IntelliJ
- Open the
counter_test.dart
file - Go to Run > Run 'tests in counter_test.dart'. You can also press the appropriate keyboard shortcut for your platform.
- Open the
-
VSCode
- Open the
counter_test.dart
file - Go to Run > Start Debugging. You can also press the appropriate keyboard shortcut for your platform.
- Open the
To run the all tests from the terminal, run the following command from the root of the project:
flutter test test/counter_test.dart
To run all tests you put into one group
,
run the following command from the root of the project:
flutter test --plain-name "Test start, increment, decrement"
This example uses the group
created in section 5.
To learn more about unit tests, you can execute this command:
flutter test --help