Using @jdeighan/base-utils
$ npm install @jdeighan/base-utils
In the interest of getting some good documentation in place, I'm
going to let the unit tests serve as the most detailed documentation.
Each module will have a documentation page the gives a summary of
the main functions/classes/objects of the module, along with a link
to the unit tests for that module
Although I do all of my development using the CoffeeScript language
(coffeescript.org, install with npm install coffeescript
)
that doesn't mean that you need to have CoffeeScript installed to
use these libraries. My projects always include both the CoffeeScript
and JavaScript versions of the libraries and, in fact, you'll see that
I always import the JavaScript files in my libraries.
The /utest
module provides an object named u
that has methods:
equal
- tests for deep equality
notequal
- tests for deep inequality
truthy
- tests if a value is truthy
falsy
- tests if a value is falsy
like
- tests if a hash has a key/value, but allows additional ones
throws
- when passed a function, tests that it throws an exception
succeeds
- when passed a function, tests that it doesn't throw an exception
it also exports a class named UnitTester
. The u
object is a
UnitTester instance.
So, for example, here are a few unit tests from the base-utils
library:
u.truthy notdefined(undefined)
u.falsy notdefined(12)
u.succeeds () => pass()
u.equal {a:1, b:2}, {a:1, b:2}
u.notequal {a:1, b:2}, {a:1, b:3}
You might note that the tests are not named. The unit tester can determine
on which line the tests exists and will report that whether a test succeeds
or fails, thus allowing you to locate it quickly.
In addition, you can override methods transformValue()
and/or
transformExpected()
of the u
object. These methods will be called on the
parameters passed to the methods above before the test is performed,
allowing you to avoid calling the same function on a series of unit tests
just to test the same function.
As an example, there is a function named escapeStr()
that will take a
string and change TAB characters to →
, space characters to ˳
,
and newline characters to ®
. You might want to test a bunch of input
strings like this:
u.equal escapeStr(" XXX\n"), "˳˳˳XXX®"
u.equal escapeStr("\t ABC\n"), "→˳ABC®"
u.equal escapeStr("X\nX\nX\n"), "X®X®X®"
u.equal escapeStr("XXX\n\t\t"), "XXX®→→"
u.equal escapeStr("XXX\n "), "XXX®˳˳"
But you could also define a transformValue()
method, then simplify
the tests, e.g.:
(() =>
t = new UnitTester()
t.transformValue = (str) => escapeStr(str)
t.equal " XXX\n", "˳˳˳XXX®"
t.equal "\t ABC\n", "→˳ABC®"
t.equal "X\nX\nX\n", "X®X®X®"
t.equal "XXX\n\t\t", "XXX®→→"
t.equal "XXX\n ", "XXX®˳˳"
)()
NOTE:
-
When you need to create a new variable in a unit test,
it's best to wrap the test(s) in an anonymous function,
then immediately call it. Since the variable is isolated
from the rest of the code, you needn't worry about name
clashes with variables that you might create later on.
-
In calls to the equal()
and like()
methods, the 1st
argument is the value, and therefore transformed by
the function passed to the transformValue()
method, and
the 2nd argument is the expected value and therefore
transformed by the function passed to the transformExpected()
method
-
UnitTester
is a class exported by @jdeighan/base-utils/utest
.
Although I could have created a new class that extends UnitTester,
then overridden the transformValue()
method in the new class,
for simple cases, I prefer to just assign a function to the
transformValue
property on the base class.
his project includes these libraries:
This project includes these binaries:
Building this project
Build this project using these instructions
How to get a screen shot in Windows 11
- Press Windows-Shift-S
- Select an area
- Open Paint app
- Paste
- Save as PNG