Invoke a function on the previously yielded subject.
If you want to get a property that is not a function on the previously yielded subject, use
.its().
.invoke(functionName)
.invoke(options, functionName)
.invoke(functionName, args...)
.invoke(options, functionName, args...)
Correct Usage
cy.wrap({ animate: fn }).invoke('animate') // Invoke the 'animate' function
cy.get('.modal').invoke('show') // Invoke the jQuery 'show' function
Incorrect Usage
cy.invoke('convert') // Errors, cannot be chained off 'cy'
cy.wrap({ name: 'Jane' }).invoke('name') // Errors, 'name' is not a function
functionName (String, Number)
Name of function to be invoked.
options (Object)
Pass in an options object to change the default behavior of .invoke().
| Option | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
log |
true |
Displays the command in the Command log |
timeout |
defaultCommandTimeout |
Time to wait for .invoke() to resolve before timing out
|
args...
Additional arguments to be given to the function call. There is no limit to the number of arguments.
const fn = () => {
return 'bar'
}
cy.wrap({ foo: fn }).invoke('foo').should('eq', 'bar') // true
.invoke() to test HTML contentIn the example below, we use .invoke() to force a hidden div to be 'display: block' so we can interact with its children elements.
cy.get('div.container')
.should('be.hidden') // element is hidden
.invoke('show') // call jquery method 'show' on the '.container'
.should('be.visible') // element is visible now
.find('input') // drill down into a child "input" element
.type('Cypress is great') // and type text
.invoke('show') and .invoke('trigger')
const fn = (a, b, c) => {
return a + b + c
}
cy.wrap({ sum: fn })
.invoke('sum', 2, 4, 6)
.should('be.gt', 10) // true
.and('be.lt', 20) // true
cy.invoke('removeAttr', 'target') to get around new tabcy.get('img').invoke('attr', 'src').should('include', 'myLogo')
In the above examples, the subject was an object, but cy.invoke also works on arrays and allows using numerical index to pick a function to run.
const reverse = (s) => Cypress._.reverse(s)
const double = (n) => n * n
// picks function with index 1 and calls it with argument 4
cy.wrap([reverse, double]).invoke(1, 4).should('eq', 16)
In this example we have a little text input field and we invoke an async action which will disable this input field. .invoke() will then wait until the Promise resolves and only then will continue executing to check if it really has been disabled.
Our input field
<input type="text" name="text" data-cy="my-text-input" />
The Cypress Test with cy.invoke() awaiting the promise:
function disableElementAsync(element) {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(() => {
element.disabled = true
resolve()
}, 3000)
})
}
cy.get('[data-cy=my-text-input]').then((textElements) => {
cy.wrap({ disableElementAsync }).invoke(
'disableElementAsync',
textElements[0]
)
})
// log message appears after 3 seconds
cy.log('after invoke')
// assert UI
cy.get('[data-cy=my-text-input]').should('be.disabled')
For a full example where invoke is used to await async Vuex store actions, visit the recipe: Vue + Vuex + REST
If the parent command yields a jQuery element, we can invoke a jQuery method, like attr, text, or val. To confirm the element's id attribute for example:
<div id="code-snippet">The code example</div>
cy.contains('The code example')
.invoke('attr', 'id')
.should('equal', 'code-snippet')
Tip: Cypress has a built-in Chai-jQuery assertion to confirm the attribute. The above example can be written simply as:
cy.contains('The code example').should('have.attr', 'id', 'code-snippet')
If you are using jQuery then the jQuery wrapped elements will automatically have your 3rd party plugins available to be called.
cy.get('input')
.invoke('getKendoDropDownList')
.then((dropDownList) => {
// yields the return of $input.getKendoDropDownList()
return dropDownList.select('apples')
})
We can rewrite the previous example in a more terse way and add an assertion.
cy.get('input')
.invoke('getKendoDropDownList')
.invoke('select', 'apples')
.invoke('val')
.should('match', /apples/)
.invoke() automatically retries invoking the specified method until the returned value satisfies the attached assertions. The example below passes after 1 second.
let message = 'hello'
const english = {
greeting() {
return message
},
}
setTimeout(() => {
message = 'bye'
}, 1000)
// initially the english.greeting() returns "hello" failing the assertion.
// .invoke('greeting') tries again and again until after 1 second
// the returned message becomes "bye" and the assertion passes
cy.wrap(english).invoke('greeting').should('equal', 'bye')
.invoke() requires being chained off a previous command. .invoke() will wait for the function to exist on the subject before running. .invoke() will wait for the promise to resolve if the invoked function returns a promise. .invoke() will automatically retry until all chained assertions have passed .invoke() can time out waiting for assertions you've added to pass. .invoke() can time out waiting for a promise you've returned to resolve. Invoke jQuery show method on element
cy.get('.connectors-div')
.should('be.hidden')
.invoke('show')
.should('be.visible')
The commands above will display in the Command Log as:
When clicking on invoke within the command log, the console outputs the following:
| Version | Changes |
|---|---|
| 3.8.0 | Added support for options argument |
| 3.7.0 | Added support for arguments of type Number for functionName
|
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Licensed under the MIT License.
https://docs.cypress.io/api/commands/invoke