You can put your module within a TypeScript class with a well-defined interface. A small downside is that you need to instantiate the class before using it.
./Foo.ts
export default interface Foo {
bar(): number;
}
./FooImpl.ts
import Foo from "./Foo";
export default class FooImpl implements Foo {
bar(): number {
return 13;
}
}
./Main.ts
import Foo from "./Foo";
import FooImpl from "./FooImpl";
const foo: Foo = new FooImpl();
export default function main(): number {
return foo.bar();
}
./FooMock.ts
import Foo from "./Foo";
export default class FooMock implements Foo {
bar(): number {
return 42;
}
}
./Main.test.ts
import main from "./Main";
jest.mock('./FooImpl', () => {
return jest.requireActual('./FooMock').default;
});
describe('Main', () => {
it('should return 42 for the mock Foo implementation', () => {
expect(main()).toBe(42);
});
});