Espresso lists

Espresso offers mechanisms to scroll to or act on a particular item for two types of lists: adapter views and recycler views.

When dealing with lists, especially those created with a RecyclerView or an AdapterView object, the view that you’re interested in might not even be on the screen because only a small number of children are displayed and are recycled as you scroll. The scrollTo() method can’t be used in this case because it requires an existing view.

Interact with adapter view list items

Instead of using the onView() method, start your search with onData() and provide a matcher against the data that is backing the view you’d like to match. Espresso will do all the work of finding the row in the Adapter object and making the item visible in the viewport.

Match data using a custom view matcher

The activity below contains a ListView, which is backed by a SimpleAdapter that holds data for each row in a Map<String, Object> object.

The list activity currently shown on the screen contains a list with
          23 items. Each item has a number, stored as a String, mapped to a
          different number, which is stored as an Object instead.

Each map has two entries: a key "STR" that contains a String, such as "item: x", and a key "LEN" that contains an Integer, which represents the length of the content. For example:

{"STR" : "item: 0", "LEN": 7}

The code for a click on the row with "item: 50" looks like this:

Kotlin

onData(allOf(`is`(instanceOf(Map::class.java)), hasEntry(equalTo("STR"),
        `is`("item: 50")))).perform(click())

Java

onData(allOf(is(instanceOf(Map.class)), hasEntry(equalTo("STR"), is("item: 50"))))
    .perform(click());

Note that Espresso scrolls through the list automatically as needed.

Let’s take apart the Matcher<Object> inside onData(). The is(instanceOf(Map.class)) method narrows the search to any item of the AdapterView, which is backed by a Map object.

In our case, this aspect of the query matches every row of the list view, but we want to click specifically on an item, so we narrow the search further with:

Kotlin

hasEntry(equalTo("STR"), `is`("item: 50"))

Java

hasEntry(equalTo("STR"), is("item: 50"))

This Matcher<String, Object> will match any Map that contains an entry with the key "STR" and the value "item: 50". Because the code to look up this is long and we want to reuse it in other locations, let’s write a custom withItemContent matcher for that:

Kotlin

return object : BoundedMatcher<Object, Map>(Map::class.java) {
    override fun matchesSafely(map: Map): Boolean {
        return hasEntry(equalTo("STR"), itemTextMatcher).matches(map)
    }

    override fun describeTo(description: Description) {
        description.appendText("with item content: ")
        itemTextMatcher.describeTo(description)
    }
}

Java

return new BoundedMatcher<Object, Map>(Map.class) {
    @Override
    public boolean matchesSafely(Map map) {
        return hasEntry(equalTo("STR"), itemTextMatcher).matches(map);
    }

    @Override
    public void describeTo(Description description) {
        description.appendText("with item content: ");
        itemTextMatcher.describeTo(description);
    }
};

You use a BoundedMatcher as a base because to only match objects of type Map. Override the matchesSafely() method, putting in the matcher found earlier, and match it against a Matcher<String> that you can pass as an argument. This allows you to call withItemContent(equalTo("foo")). For code brevity, you can create another matcher that already calls the equalTo() and accepts a String object:

Kotlin

fun withItemContent(expectedText: String): Matcher<Object> {
    checkNotNull(expectedText)
    return withItemContent(equalTo(expectedText))
}

Java

public static Matcher<Object> withItemContent(String expectedText) {
    checkNotNull(expectedText);
    return withItemContent(equalTo(expectedText));
}

Now the code to click on the item is simple:

Kotlin

onData(withItemContent("item: 50")).perform(click())

Java

onData(withItemContent("item: 50")).perform(click());

For the full code of this test, take a look at the testClickOnItem50() method within the AdapterViewTest class and this custom LongListMatchers matcher on GitHub.

Match a specific child view

The sample above issues a click in the middle of the entire row of a ListView. But what if we want to operate on a specific child of the row? For example, we would like to click on the second column of the row of the LongListActivity, which displays the String.length of the content in the first column:

In this example, it would be beneficial to extract just the length of
          a particular piece of content. This process involves determining the
          value of the second column in a row.

Just add an onChildView() specification to your implementation of DataInteraction:

Kotlin

onData(withItemContent("item: 60"))
    .onChildView(withId(R.id.item_size))
    .perform(click())

Java

onData(withItemContent("item: 60"))
    .onChildView(withId(R.id.item_size))
    .perform(click());

Interact with recycler view list items

RecyclerView objects work differently than AdapterView objects, so onData() cannot be used to interact with them.

To interact with RecyclerViews using Espresso, you can use the espresso-contrib package, which has a collection of RecyclerViewActions that can be used to scroll to positions or to perform actions on items:

  • scrollTo() - Scrolls to the matched View, if it exists.
  • scrollToHolder() - Scrolls to the matched View Holder, if it exists.
  • scrollToPosition() - Scrolls to a specific position.
  • actionOnHolderItem() - Performs a View Action on a matched View Holder.
  • actionOnItem() - Performs a View Action on a matched View.
  • actionOnItemAtPosition() - Performs a ViewAction on a view at a specific position.

The following snippets feature some examples from the RecyclerViewSample sample:

Kotlin

@Test(expected = PerformException::class)
fun itemWithText_doesNotExist() {
    // Attempt to scroll to an item that contains the special text.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
        .perform(
            // scrollTo will fail the test if no item matches.
            RecyclerViewActions.scrollTo(
                hasDescendant(withText("not in the list"))
            )
        )
}

Java

@Test(expected = PerformException.class)
public void itemWithText_doesNotExist() {
    // Attempt to scroll to an item that contains the special text.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
            // scrollTo will fail the test if no item matches.
            .perform(RecyclerViewActions.scrollTo(
                    hasDescendant(withText("not in the list"))
            ));
}

Kotlin

@Test fun scrollToItemBelowFold_checkItsText() {
    // First, scroll to the position that needs to be matched and click on it.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
        .perform(
            RecyclerViewActions.actionOnItemAtPosition(
                ITEM_BELOW_THE_FOLD,
                click()
            )
        )

    // Match the text in an item below the fold and check that it's displayed.
    val itemElementText = "${activityRule.activity.resources
        .getString(R.string.item_element_text)} ${ITEM_BELOW_THE_FOLD.toString()}"
    onView(withText(itemElementText)).check(matches(isDisplayed()))
}

Java

@Test
public void scrollToItemBelowFold_checkItsText() {
    // First, scroll to the position that needs to be matched and click on it.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
            .perform(RecyclerViewActions.actionOnItemAtPosition(ITEM_BELOW_THE_FOLD,
            click()));

    // Match the text in an item below the fold and check that it's displayed.
    String itemElementText = activityRule.getActivity().getResources()
            .getString(R.string.item_element_text)
            + String.valueOf(ITEM_BELOW_THE_FOLD);
    onView(withText(itemElementText)).check(matches(isDisplayed()));
}

Kotlin

@Test fun itemInMiddleOfList_hasSpecialText() {
    // First, scroll to the view holder using the isInTheMiddle() matcher.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
        .perform(RecyclerViewActions.scrollToHolder(isInTheMiddle()))

    // Check that the item has the special text.
    val middleElementText = activityRule.activity.resources
            .getString(R.string.middle)
    onView(withText(middleElementText)).check(matches(isDisplayed()))
}

Java

@Test
public void itemInMiddleOfList_hasSpecialText() {
    // First, scroll to the view holder using the isInTheMiddle() matcher.
    onView(ViewMatchers.withId(R.id.recyclerView))
            .perform(RecyclerViewActions.scrollToHolder(isInTheMiddle()));

    // Check that the item has the special text.
    String middleElementText =
            activityRule.getActivity().getResources()
            .getString(R.string.middle);
    onView(withText(middleElementText)).check(matches(isDisplayed()));
}

Additional resources

For more information about using Espresso lists in Android tests, consult the following resources.

Samples

  • DataAdapterSample: Showcases the onData() entry point for Espresso, for lists and AdapterView objects.