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React 16 Essentials

You're reading from   React 16 Essentials A fast-paced, hands-on guide to designing and building scalable and maintainable web apps with React 16

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787126046
Length 240 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Christopher Pitt Christopher Pitt
Author Profile Icon Christopher Pitt
Christopher Pitt
Artemij Fedosejev Artemij Fedosejev
Author Profile Icon Artemij Fedosejev
Artemij Fedosejev
Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
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Adam Boduch
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What's New in React 16 FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing Powerful Tools for Your Project 3. Creating Your First React Element 4. Creating Your First React Component 5. Making Your React Components Reactive 6. Using Your React Components with Another Library 7. Updating Your React Components 8. Building Complex React Components 9. Testing Your React Application with Jest 10. Supercharging Your React Architecture with Flux 11. Preparing Your React Application for Painless Maintenance with Flux 12. Refining Your Flux Apps with Redux Index

Chapter 9. Testing Your React Application with Jest

By now, you have created a number of React components. Some of them are quite straightforward, but some are sophisticated enough. Having built both, you might have gained a certain confidence, which makes you believe that no matter how complex the user interface is, you can build it with React, without any major pitfalls. This is a good confidence to have. After all, this is why we're investing time in learning React. However, there is a trap that many confident React developers fall into—the act of not writing unit tests.

What is a unit test? As the name suggests, it's a test for a single unit of your application. A single unit in your application is often a function, which suggests that writing unit tests means writing tests for your functions.

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