.setContext(context) => Self

A method that sets the context of the root component, and re-renders. Useful for when you are wanting to test how the component behaves over time with changing contexts.

NOTE: can only be called on a wrapper instance that is also the root instance.

Arguments

  1. context (Object): An object containing new props to merge in with the current state

Returns

ReactWrapper: Returns itself.

Example

import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';

function SimpleComponent(props, context) {
  const { name } = context;
  return <div>{name}</div>;
}
SimpleComponent.contextTypes = {
  name: PropTypes.string,
};
const context = { name: 'foo' };
const wrapper = mount(<SimpleComponent />, { context });
expect(wrapper.text()).to.equal('foo');
wrapper.setContext({ name: 'bar' });
expect(wrapper.text()).to.equal('bar');
wrapper.setContext({ name: 'baz' });
expect(wrapper.text()).to.equal('baz');

Common Gotchas

  • .setContext() can only be used on a wrapper that was initially created with a call to mount() that includes a context specified in the options argument.
  • The root component you are rendering must have a contextTypes static property.