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Socket researchers found several malicious npm packages typosquatting Chalk and Chokidar, targeting Node.js developers with kill switches and data theft.
Framework for baseline acceptance driven development in JavaScript.
General idea: It's annoying to maintain tests. Every time you change an api, all the tests fail and they need to be manually updated.
BADD keeps tracks of the new info on failures and allows you to automagically update the expected data.
baddsert replaces your old assert library. Write your tests as usual, using baddsert as the assert. Step one is to init the whole shebang:
import {baddsert} from 'baddsert';
let docTests = baddsert('docTests');
You'll need to init once per file. Try and make it descriptive of that particular test battery.
Now that everything's all init-ifyed, let's use baddsert:
it('runs a superfluous demo test', () => {
let result = hammertime(`can't touch this`);
docTests('I am a steg-o-sarus', result);
});
The first param describes this particular assertion - what are you testing?
The second is the thing you want asserted.
And now, the magic happens. When you run your tests, baddsert will take the result from the first test and save it under the badd-baseline
directory (in this case, as the file docTests
). Future runs will throw if the value passed in is not deepStrictEqual
to the original one.
When you inevitably change something that makes the tests fail (because your function is correctly returning a new value) run baddsert
in the same dir as your badd-baseline
directory. This will run through all of your asserts, letting you replace the old data with the data that was passed in during the failing test.
--- Checking docTests ---
I am a steg-o-sarus: AGH THEY DON'T MATCH DOOOOOOOM
Stored result: result
Latest: NEW SWEET DATAS
Should I replace this? [y/n] :
Easy as pie.
Further reading: https://medium.com/@tinganho/baseline-acceptance-driven-development-f39f7010a04#.d1fdg36x0
FAQs
Baseline Acceptance Driven Development for JavaScript
The npm package baddsert receives a total of 1 weekly downloads. As such, baddsert popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that baddsert 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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