Assert Your Style - Testing CSS in Ember Apps

These are a few approaches you can choose from to assert against the styling of your web page as part of your automated integration and acceptance test suite:

anchorTesting Inline Styles of a HTML Element

Although it's a good practice to keep your HTML and your CSS entirely separate, inline styles on components and other elements in your application are sometimes necessary to be able to apply CSS property values that change dynamically. And testing those styles can be important, too.

Imagine you created a component with an inline style attached to it assigning a variable blue background color to it:


// app/components/mainmatter-logo-tile.js
import Component from '@ember/component';
import { computed } from '@ember/object';

const tileColors = {
  dark: 'rgb(29, 113, 182)',
  mid: 'rgb(0, 127, 189)',
  light: 'rgb(108, 189, 242)',
};

export default Component.extend({
  tileColor: 'mid',
  attributeBindings: ['style'],
  style: computed('tileColor', function () {
    let colorShade = this.get('tileColor');
    let bgColor = tileColors[colorShade];
    return htmlSafe(`background-color: ${bgColor}`);
  }),
});

Using ember-test-selectors to apply data- attributes to this component, you can make it easier to interact with your component later on in the test.

ember install ember-test-selectors

Which now allows you to tag your component for testing as follows:


// app/components/mainmatter-logo-tile.js
import Component from '@ember/component';
import { computed } from '@ember/object';

const tileColors = {
  dark: 'rgb(29, 113, 182)',
  mid: 'rgb(0, 127, 189)',
  light: 'rgb(108, 189, 242)',
};

export default Component.extend({
  tileColor: 'mid',
  'data-test-mainmatter-logo-tile': true,
  attributeBindings: ['style'],
  style: computed('tileColor', function () {
    let colorShade = this.get('tileColor');
    let bgColor = tileColors[colorShade];
    return htmlSafe(`background-color: ${bgColor}`);
  }),
});

To learn more about the rationale behind ember-test-selectors, be sure to also give this introduction a read.

Using the HTMLElement.style API, we can assert if the correct background color has been applied to our component:


// tests/integration/components/mainmatter-logo-tile-test.js
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'ember-qunit';
import { find, render } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';

module('Integration | Component | mainmatter-logo-tile', function (hooks) {
  setupRenderingTest(hooks);

  test('it allows setting a dark background color', async function (assert) {
    await render(hbs`{{mainmatter-logo-tile tileColor="dark"}}`);

    let elementStyle = find('[data-test-mainmatter-logo-tile]').style;
    assert.equal(elementStyle.backgroundColor, 'rgb(29, 113, 182)');
  });
});

HTMLElement.style allows to check for the value of individual CSS properties. The same API can also be used to assign new values for any CSS property programmatically. You can read more about the style attribute in the MDN docs on HTMLElement.style here.

A major benefit of testing CSS properties directly is that it allows us to derive information on how inline styles are applied to elements in our application. This is particularly useful if we want to test dynamic styles.

Testing inline styles also has its drawbacks though: these styles don't necessarily reflect the way the element is ultimately rendered on the page. In this situation the assertion against an element's computed style provides much more insight.

anchorTesting Computed Styles of a HTML Element

At times you also want to check against the actual computed value of your element in your tests. Some CSS definitions require the browser to resolve the basic computation, the actual computed styles will be applied during rendering. For example, in the case of an element with a percentage-based width defined via CSS stylesheets (e.g. width: 80%), the computed style will resolve to width: 800px if the element happens to be a relatively positioned (position: relative) child element of another DOM node with a computed width of 1000px. If the element's parent element turns out to have a width of 500px though, the computed width of the "80% wide" child will resolve to a mere 400px.

Computed styles provide information about the styles that are ultimately assigned to an element. Due to CSS specificity browsers will decide which CSS property value either defined in a CSS stylesheet or an inline style is most relevant and this value will also be reflected in the element's computed styles.

The getComputedStyle method will return an object containing these most relevant style values. In contrast to the object returned from HTMLElement.style the return value of getComputedStyle is read-only.

Therefore the getComputedStyle method is the ideal candidate for asserting styles of an element in rendering tests:


// tests/integration/components/mainmatter-logo-tile-test.js
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'ember-qunit';
import { find, render } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';

module('Integration | Component | mainmatter-logo-tile', function (hooks) {
  setupRenderingTest(hooks);

  test('it allows setting a dark background color', async function (assert) {
    await render(hbs`{{mainmatter-logo-tile tileColor="dark"}}`);

    let computedStyle = window.getComputedStyle(
      find('[data-test-mainmatter-logo-tile]'),
      null,
    );
    assert.equal(
      computedStyle.getPropertyValue('background-color'),
      'rgb(29, 113, 182)',
    );
  });
});

anchorEasy Style Assertions with qunit-dom

Now we know how we can write style-related tests for our automated test process that assert that the expected styles are applied to elements on the web page.

But there's an even easier way to assert the computed styles of elements in your QUnit test suite. Since v0.8.1 of qunit-dom you can make your tests truly ✨

Check it out:

npm install --save-dev qunit-dom

or

yarn add --dev qunit-dom

In your rendering test you're now able to check for the component's style using the hasStyle method:


// tests/integration/components/mainmatter-logo-tile-test.js
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'ember-qunit';
import { find, render } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';

module('Integration | Component | mainmatter-logo-tile', function (hooks) {
  setupRenderingTest(hooks);

  test('it allows setting a dark background color', async function (assert) {
    await render(hbs`{{mainmatter-logo-tile tileColor="dark"}}`);

    assert.dom('[data-test-mainmatter-logo-tile]').hasStyle({
      backgroundColor: 'rgb(29, 113, 182)',
    });
  });
});

You can read more about the usage of the .hasStyle method in the API documentation.


There are different ways to assert against inline styles and computed styles in your application and if you're using Ember & QUnit, qunit-dom is your best bet to make your style tests easy to write and read.

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