tick
Move time after overriding a native time function with
cy.clock()
.
cy.clock()
must be called before cy.tick()
in order
to override native time functions first.
Syntax
cy.tick(milliseconds, options)
Usage
Correct Usage
cy.tick(500)
Arguments
milliseconds (Number)
The number of milliseconds
to move the clock. Any timers within the affected
range of time will be called.
options (Object)
Pass in an options object to change the default behavior of cy.tick()
.
Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
log | true | Displays the command in the Command log |
Yields
cy.tick()
yields a clock
object with the following methods:
-
clock.tick(milliseconds)
Move the clock a number of milliseconds. Any timers within the affected range of time will be called.
-
clock.restore()
Restore all overridden native functions. This is automatically called between tests, so should not generally be needed.
You can also access the clock
object via this.clock
in a
.then()
callback.
Examples
Milliseconds
setTimeout
Create a clock and move time to trigger a // app code loaded by index.html
window.addIntro = () => {
setTimeout(() => {
document.getElementById('#header').textContent = 'Hello, World'
}, 500)
}
cy.clock()
cy.visit('/index.html')
cy.window().invoke('addIntro')
cy.tick(500)
cy.get('#header').should('have.text', 'Hello, World')
cy.clock()
with cy.tick()
Using
Restore clock
You can restore the clock and allow your application to resume normally without manipulating native global functions related to time. This is automatically called between tests.
cy.clock()
cy.visit('http://localhost:3333')
cy.get('#search').type('Acme Company')
cy.tick(1000)
// more test code here
// restore the clock
cy.clock().then((clock) => {
clock.restore()
})
// more test code here
You could also restore by using .invoke() to invoke the
restore
function.
cy.clock().invoke('restore')
Rules
Requirements
-
cy.tick()
requires being chained off ofcy
. -
cy.tick()
requires thatcy.clock()
be called before it.
Assertions
-
cy.tick()
is a utility command. -
cy.tick()
will not run assertions. Assertions will pass through as if this command did not exist.
Timeouts
-
cy.tick()
cannot time out.
Command Log
Create a clock and tick it 1 second
cy.clock()
cy.tick(1000)
The command above will display in the Command Log as:
When clicking on the tick
command within the command log, the console outputs
the following:
History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
7.0.0 | log option added to cy.tick() |
0.18.8 | cy.tick() command added |