.contains(nodeOrNodes) => Boolean
Returns whether or not all given react elements match elements in the render tree. It will determine if an element in the wrapper matches the expected element by checking if the expected element has the same props as the wrapper's element and share the same values.
Arguments
nodeOrNodes
(ReactElement|Array<ReactElement>
): The node or array of nodes whose presence you are detecting in the current instance's render tree.
Returns
Boolean
: whether or not the current wrapper has nodes anywhere in its render tree that match
the ones passed in.
Example
const wrapper = mount((
<div>
<div data-foo="foo" data-bar="bar">Hello</div>
</div>
));
expect(wrapper.contains(<div data-foo="foo" data-bar="bar">Hello</div>)).to.equal(true);
expect(wrapper.contains(<div data-foo="foo">Hello</div>)).to.equal(false);
expect(wrapper.contains(<div data-foo="foo" data-bar="bar" data-baz="baz">Hello</div>)).to.equal(false);
expect(wrapper.contains(<div data-foo="foo" data-bar="Hello">Hello</div>)).to.equal(false);
expect(wrapper.contains(<div data-foo="foo" data-bar="bar" />)).to.equal(false);
const wrapper = mount((
<div>
<span>Hello</span>
<div>Goodbye</div>
<span>Again</span>
</div>
));
expect(wrapper.contains([
<span>Hello</span>,
<div>Goodbye</div>,
])).to.equal(true);
expect(wrapper.contains([
<span>Hello</span>,
<div>World</div>,
])).to.equal(false);
Common Gotchas
.contains()
expects a ReactElement, not a selector (like many other methods). Make sure that when you are calling it you are calling it with a ReactElement or a JSX expression.- Keep in mind that this method determines equality based on the equality of the node's children as well.
- Every attribute of the wrapped element must be matched by the element you're checking. To permit (and ignore) additional attributes on the wrapped element, use containsMatchingElement() instead.