Exports a
jsdom
window object.
Exports a jsdom window object. This is useful for enabling browser modules to run in Node.js or testing browser modules in any Node.js test framework.
Requires Node.js v6 or newer, use window@3
to support older Node.js versions.
npm install --save window
Or if you're just using for testing you'll probably want:
npm install --save-dev window
const Window = require('window');
const window = new Window();
const div = window.document.createElement('div');
// HTMLDivElement
div instanceof window.HTMLElement
// true
Because window
is just a normal JavaScript object it can be used more efficiently with object destructuring.
const { document } = new Window();
document.body.innerHTML = '<div class="foo">Hi!</div>';
document.body.querySelector('.foo').textContent;
// "Hi!"
You can also pass a jsdom config object that will be passed along to the underlying jsdom instance.
const jsdomConfig = { userAgent: 'Custom UA' };
const window = new Window(jsdomConfig);
window.navigator.userAgent;
// "Custom UA"
You can use a really simple pattern to enable your browser modules to run in Node.js. Just allow a window object to be passed in to your module and prepend any references to browser globals with win
. Set win
to the passed in window object if it exists, otherwise fallback to global window
.
function createTitle(text, win) {
win = win || (typeof window === 'undefined' ? undefined : window);
const title = win.document.createElement('h1');
title.innerHTML = text;
return title;
};
module.exports = createTitle;
Browser usage:
createTitle('Hi');
// <h1>Hi</h1>
Node.js usage:
const window = new Window();
createTitle('Hi', window);
// <h1>Hi</h1>
Obviously you don't need to follow this exact pattern, maybe you already have an options object and you only need document
not the entire window object:
function createTitle(text, opts = {}) {
const doc = opts.document || window.document;
const title = doc.createElement('h1');
...
You can see an example of this pattern in lukechilds/create-node
. Specifically src/create-node.js and test/unit.js.
Sometimes you may have dependencies that you can't pass a window object to. In that scenario you can alternatively use browser-env
which will simulate a global browser environment.
MIT © Luke Childs