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Chapters
  • Introduction
  • Component explorers
  • Workflow
  • Visual TDD
  • Automate
  • Conclusion

Introduction to visual testing

The pragmatic way to test user interfaces

User interfaces are subjective. The answer to "does this look right?" depends on your browser, device, and personal taste. You still have to look at the rendered UI to verify its appearance.

But it takes forever to check the whole UI manually each commit. Different approaches like unit and snapshot testing attempt to automate visual verification. They often end in failure because machines can't determine UI correctness from sequences of HTML tags and CSS classes.

How do teams prevent visual bugs? What techniques do Microsoft, BBC, and Shopify use to ship UIs to millions of people? My co-author Tom and I researched leading teams to figure out what actually works.

This handbook introduces visual testing, a pragmatic approach that combines the accuracy of the human eye with the efficiency of machines. Instead of removing people from the testing equation, visual testing uses tools to focus their effort on the specific UI changes that require attention.

Visual testing driven path

Unit tests don't have eyeballs

To grasp visual testing, it makes sense to start with unit testing. Modern UIs are component-driven – they're composed of modular pieces. The component construct allows you to render UI as a function of props and state. That means you can unit test components much like any other function.

A unit test isolates a module and then verifies its behavior. It supplies inputs (props, state, etc.) and compares the output to an expected result. Unit tests are desirable because testing modules in isolation makes it easier to cover edge cases and pinpoint the source of failures.

The core issue is that much of a UI's inherent complexity is visual — the specifics of how generated HTML and CSS render on the user's screen.

Unit tests are perfect for evaluating concrete outputs: 2 + 2 === 4. But they're not great for UI because it's tough to discern which details of HTML or CSS impact appearance and how. For example, HTML changes don't always affect the UI look and feel.

What about snapshot tests?

Snapshot tests provide an alternate approach to verifying UI appearance. They render the component then capture the generated DOM as a "baseline". Subsequent changes compare the new DOM to the baseline. If there are differences, the developer must explicitly update the baseline.

Minified component code

In practice, DOM snapshots are awkward because it's tricky to determine how a UI renders by evaluating an HTML blob.

Snapshot tests suffer from the same brittleness as other automated UI tests. Any changes to the internal workings of a component require the test to be updated, regardless of whether the component's rendered output changed.

Visual testing is made for UIs

Visual tests are designed to catch changes in UI appearance. You use a component explorer like Storybook to isolate UI components, mock their variations, and save the supported test cases as "stories".

During development, “run” a quick manual verification of a component by rendering it in a browser to see how it looks. Confirm the variations of your component by toggling through each test case listed in the component explorer.

In QA, use automation to detect regressions and enforce UI consistency. Tools like Chromatic capture an image snapshot of each test case, complete with markup, styling, and other assets, in a consistent browser environment.

Each commit, new image snapshots are automatically compared to previously accepted baseline snapshots. When the machine detects visual differences, the developer gets notified to approve the intentional change or fix the accidental bug.

That sounds like a lot of work...

That may sound laborious, but it ends up being easier than sifting through false positives from automated tests, updating test cases to match up with minor UI changes, and working overtime to make tests pass again.

Learn the tooling

Now that we have a sense of visual testing let’s check out the main tool you need to enable it: a component explorer. In the next chapter, we’ll see how component explorers help developers build and test components.

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Next Chapter
Component explorers
A tool for UI development and visual testing
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