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Learn React with TypeScript

You're reading from   Learn React with TypeScript A beginner's guide to reactive web development with React 18 and TypeScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804614204
Length 474 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Carl Rippon Carl Rippon
Author Profile Icon Carl Rippon
Carl Rippon
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: Introducing React FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introducing TypeScript 4. Chapter 3: Setting Up React and TypeScript 5. Chapter 4: Using React Hooks 6. Part 2: App Fundamentals
7. Chapter 5: Approaches to Styling React Frontends 8. Chapter 6: Routing with React Router 9. Chapter 7: Working with Forms 10. Part 3: Data
11. Chapter 8: State Management 12. Chapter 9: Interacting with RESTful APIs 13. Chapter 10: Interacting with GraphQL APIs 14. Part 4: Advanced React
15. Chapter 11: Reusable Components 16. Chapter 12: Unit Testing with Jest and React Testing Library 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Questions

Answer the following questions to check what you have learned in this chapter:

  1. We have written some tests for a HomePage component and placed them in a file called HomePage.tests.tsx. However, the tests aren’t run when the npm test command is executed—not even when the a key is pressed to run all the tests. What do you think the problem might be?
  2. Why doesn’t the following expectation pass? How could this be resolved?
    expect({ name: 'Bob' }).toBe({ name: 'Bob' });
  3. Which matcher can be used to check that a variable isn’t null?
  4. Here’s an expectation that checks whether a Save button is disabled:
    expect(
      screen.getByText('Save').hasAttribute('disabled')
    ).toBe(true);

The expectation passes as expected, but is there a different matcher that can be used to simplify this?

  1. Write a test for the getNewCheckedIds function we used in this chapter. The test should check...
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