Catalog
github/unit-test-vue-pinia

github

unit-test-vue-pinia

Write and review unit tests for Vue 3 + TypeScript + Vitest + Pinia codebases. Use when creating or updating tests for components, composables, and stores; mocking Pinia with createTestingPinia; applying Vue Test Utils patterns; and enforcing black-box assertions over implementation details.

global
New~1.8k
v1.0Saved Jun 26, 2026

unit-test-vue-pinia

Use this skill to create or review unit tests for Vue components, composables, and Pinia stores. Keep tests small, deterministic, and behavior-first.

Workflow

  1. Identify the behavior boundary first: component UI behavior, composable behavior, or store behavior.
  2. Choose the narrowest test style that can prove that behavior.
  3. Set up Pinia with the least powerful option that still covers the scenario.
  4. Drive the test through public inputs such as props, form updates, button clicks, emitted child events, and store APIs.
  5. Assert observable outputs and side effects before considering any instance-level assertion.
  6. Return or review tests with clear behavior-oriented names and note any remaining coverage gaps.

Core Rules

  • Test one behavior per test.
  • Assert observable input/output behavior first (rendered text, emitted events, callback calls, store state changes).
  • Avoid implementation-coupled assertions.
  • Access wrapper.vm only in exceptional cases when there is no reasonable DOM, prop, emit, or store-level assertion.
  • Prefer explicit setup in beforeEach() and reset mocks every test.
  • Use checked-in reference material in references/pinia-patterns.md as the local source of truth for standard Pinia test setups.

Pinia Testing Approach

Use references/pinia-patterns.md first, then fall back to Pinia's testing cookbook when the checked-in examples do not cover the case.

Default pattern for component tests

Use createTestingPinia as a global plugin while mounting. Prefer createSpy: vi.fn as the default for consistency and easier action-spy assertions.

const wrapper = mount(ComponentUnderTest, {
	global: {
		plugins: [
			createTestingPinia({
				createSpy: vi.fn,
			}),
		],
	},
});

By default, actions are stubbed and spied. Use stubActions: true (default) when the test only needs to verify whether an action was called (or not called).

Accepted minimal Pinia setups

The following are also valid and should not be flagged as incorrect:

  • createTestingPinia({}) when the test does not assert Pinia action spy behavior.
  • createTestingPinia({ initialState: ... }) or createTestingPinia({ stubActions: ... }) without createSpy, when the test only needs state seeding or action stubbing behavior and does not inspect generated spies.
  • setActivePinia(createTestingPinia(...)) in store/composable-focused tests (without mounting a component) when mocking/seeding dependent stores is needed.

Use createSpy: vi.fn when action spy assertions are part of the test intent.

Execute real actions only when needed

Use stubActions: false only when the test must validate the action's real behavior and side effects. Do not switch it on by default for simple "was called" assertions.

const wrapper = mount(ComponentUnderTest, {
	global: {
		plugins: [
			createTestingPinia({
				createSpy: vi.fn,
				stubActions: false,
			}),
		],
	},
});

Seed store state with initialState

const wrapper = mount(ComponentUnderTest, {
	global: {
		plugins: [
			createTestingPinia({
				createSpy: vi.fn,
				initialState: {
					counter: { n: 20 },
					user: { name: "Leia Organa" },
				},
			}),
		],
	},
});

Add Pinia plugins through createTestingPinia

const wrapper = mount(ComponentUnderTest, {
	global: {
		plugins: [
			createTestingPinia({
				createSpy: vi.fn,
				plugins: [myPiniaPlugin],
			}),
		],
	},
});

Getter override pattern for edge cases

const pinia = createTestingPinia({ createSpy: vi.fn });
const store = useCounterStore(pinia);

store.double = 999;
// @ts-expect-error test-only reset of overridden getter
store.double = undefined;

Pure store unit tests

Prefer pure store tests with createPinia() when the goal is to validate store state transitions and action behavior without component rendering. Use createTestingPinia() only when you need stubbed dependent stores, seeded test doubles, or action spies.

beforeEach(() => {
	setActivePinia(createPinia());
});

it("increments", () => {
	const counter = useCounterStore();
	counter.increment();
	expect(counter.n).toBe(1);
});

Vue Test Utils Approach

Follow Vue Test Utils guidance: https://test-utils.vuejs.org/guide/

  • Mount shallow by default for focused unit tests.
  • Mount full component trees only when integration behavior is the subject.
  • Drive behavior through props, user-like interactions, and emitted events.
  • Prefer findComponent(...).vm.$emit(...) for child stub events instead of touching parent internals.
  • Use nextTick only when updates are async.
  • Assert emitted events and payloads with wrapper.emitted(...).
  • Access wrapper.vm only when no DOM assertion, emitted event assertion, prop assertion, or store-level assertion can express the behavior. Treat it as an exception and keep the assertion narrowly scoped.

Key Testing Snippets

Emit and assert payload:

await wrapper.find("button").trigger("click");
expect(wrapper.emitted("submit")?.[0]?.[0]).toBe("Mango Mission");

Update input and assert output:

await wrapper.find("input").setValue("Agent Violet");
await wrapper.find("form").trigger("submit");
expect(wrapper.emitted("save")?.[0]?.[0]).toBe("Agent Violet");

Test Writing Workflow

  1. Identify the behavior boundary to test.
  2. Build minimal fixture data (only fields needed by that behavior).
  3. Configure Pinia and required test doubles.
  4. Trigger behavior through public inputs.
  5. Assert public outputs and side effects.
  6. Refactor test names to describe behavior, not implementation.

Constraints and Safety

  • Do not test private/internal implementation details.
  • Do not overuse snapshots for dynamic UI behavior.
  • Do not assert every field in large objects if only one behavior matters.
  • Keep fake data deterministic; avoid random values.
  • Do not claim a Pinia setup is wrong when it is one of the accepted minimal setups above.
  • Do not rewrite working tests toward deeper mounting or real actions unless the behavior under test requires that extra surface area.
  • Flag missing test coverage, brittle selectors, and implementation-coupled assertions explicitly during review.

Output Contract

  • For create or update, return the finished test code plus a short note describing the selected Pinia strategy.
  • For review, return concrete findings first, then missing coverage or brittleness risks.
  • When the safest choice is ambiguous, state the assumption that drove the chosen test setup.

References

Files2
2 files · 2.8 KB

Select a file to preview

Overall Score

88/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

92

Quality

87

Clarity

89

Completeness

85

Summary

This skill provides guidance for writing unit tests for Vue 3 + TypeScript codebases using Vitest, Vue Test Utils, and Pinia state management. It establishes behavior-first testing principles, demonstrates how to configure Pinia testing mocks (createTestingPinia), and documents when to use shallow mounting, mocking, and store-level assertions instead of implementation details.

Detected Capabilities

code analysiscode generationtesting guidancedocumentation reference

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

write vue testspinia store testingunit test componentsmock pinia statevue test utils

Referenced Domains

External domains referenced in skill content, detected by static analysis.

pinia.vuejs.orgtest-utils.vuejs.org

Use Cases

  • Write component unit tests with Vue Test Utils and Pinia mocking
  • Review test files for behavior-first assertions and Pinia best practices
  • Set up Pinia test doubles with minimal configuration for deterministic tests
  • Refactor tests away from implementation-coupled assertions toward observable outputs
  • Test Vue 3 composables and Pinia stores with pure unit tests

Quality Notes

  • Clear hierarchical structure with Core Rules followed by patterns and code examples
  • Excellent reference to checked-in pinia-patterns.md for local patterns of truth
  • Practical workflow steps (identify behavior, choose test style, set up Pinia, drive through inputs, assert outputs) are concrete and actionable
  • Comprehensive Core Rules clarify what to avoid (implementation coupling, vm access, loose mocking)
  • Well-organized snippets for common patterns (emit/assert, input/output, action spies)
  • Supporting reference file (pinia-patterns.md) is present and well-curated with cookbook-aligned examples
  • Constraints section explicitly documents anti-patterns to watch for during review
  • Output contract is clear—distinguishes between create/update and review modes with explicit deliverables
  • Documentation appropriately links to external references (Pinia docs, Vue Test Utils) but emphasizes local reference material first
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Jun 26, 2026

Reviews

Add this skill to your library to leave a review.

No reviews yet

Be the first to share your experience.

Add github/unit-test-vue-pinia to your library

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...