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18 February 2020

Visual Testing of Patternlab and Drupal

What is Patternlab?

 

Patternlab is a UI design system that helps to build and maintain websites. The biggest advantage of using such a system is that it fills the gap between developers and creates a universal library of components that everyone uses.

In other words, instead of every developer builds their pages the way they like there is a centralized library where they either take elements or contribute to it and then use them.

Patternlab provides a framework for building components. They are:

  • Atoms (example: lists, form elements, tables)
  • Molecules (example: cards, menus)
  • Organisms (example: card grids, accordion)
  • Templates (example: two-column layout, full-width layout)
  • Pages (example: homepage, blog listing page)

 

Drupal integrations

 

Because both Patternlab and Drupal 8 can use twig as a rendering engine it is possible to build a theme to be based on Patternlab’s components.

The most notable projects in Drupal are Emulsify (https://github.com/fourkitchens/emulsify) by Four Kitchens and Bear Skin by Zivtech (https://github.com/zivtech/bear_skin/tree/8.x-2.x).

The way integration works is that in Drupal templates there are includes of Patternlab’s templates. This makes all development happen in Patternlab’s library and then the theme simply includes proper templates in proper places.

Example https://github.com/fourkitchens/emulsify/blob/develop/templates/navigation/breadcrumb.html.twig.

 

 

Visual Regression Testing

 

It makes it very easy to apply visual regression testing to Patternlab’s demo site.

For example, you can do it with BackstopJS and commit screenshots to the repository itself.

Also, we made it easy to be done with Diffy -- you simply need to provide a URL of the static site and Diffy’s crawler will get pages based on the JSON available to the static site’s generator. We pull:

  • Page with all atoms
  • Pages with all molecules, organisms, templates, and pages

Scanning Patternlab Demo Site

 

In this way, in just a few minutes you will have a full visual snapshot of your components. So whenever you make any changes it is easy to see if any regressions were introduced.

 

Tags

How to Avoid False Positives when Doing Visual Testing

The biggest pain point of fulll-page screenshot visual regression testing are false positives. They usually happen because of the dynamic nature of the content. There are few ways of handling this situation. First, you could mask or remove dynamic elements completely. But then you’ll miss testing them.
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Diffy helps your QA team

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