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Oracle Drags Its Feet in the JavaScript Trademark Dispute
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@lukemorales/jest-type-matchers
Advanced tools
Custom jest matchers to test the state of your types
Custom jest matchers to test the state of your types.
You write Typescript and want assert various things about the state of your types?
This library provides a set of custom matchers that you can use to extend jest
and assert your test results against expected types.
This library is available as a package on NPM, install with your favorite package manager:
npm install --save-dev @lukemorales/jest-type-matchers
Import @lukemorales/jest-type-matchers
once in your tests setup
file:
// In your jest-setup.ts (or any other name)
import '@lukemorales/jest-type-matchers';
// In jest.config.js add (if you haven't already)
setupFilesAfterEnv: ['<rootDir>/jest-setup.ts']
These custom matchers allow you to just check your types. This means that they will never fail your test suite because type-checking happens at compile-time only.
toHaveType
expect(true).toHaveType<boolean>();
type Result = { ok: boolean } & { data: null };
expect<Result>({ ok: true, data: null }).toHaveType<{ ok: boolean; data: null }>();
This allows you to check that a variable has an expected type.
toNotHaveType
expect('hello world').toNotHaveType<number>();
This allows you to check that a variable does not have a specific type.
toHaveStrictType
expect(true).toHaveStrictType<boolean>();
type Result = { ok: boolean } & { data: null };
expect<Result>({ ok: true, data: null }).toHaveStrictType<{ ok: boolean } & { data: null }>();
This allows you to check that a variable is strict equal to an expected type.
toNotHaveStrictType
expect('hello world').toNotHaveStrictType<number>();
This allows you to check that a variable is not strict equal to a specific type.
FAQs
Custom jest matchers to test the state of your types
The npm package @lukemorales/jest-type-matchers receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, @lukemorales/jest-type-matchers popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @lukemorales/jest-type-matchers demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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