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chai-spies-next
Advanced tools
This is a fork of Chai Spies, which is used to publish the latest code on the master branch to an NPM module. Chai spies has seen decreased development and blocks great features from release on long-running issues.
This is an addon plugin for the chai assertion library. It provides the most basic function spy ability and tests. Though useful for small modules, you are probably going to want something more robust. Check out jack for a full featured mock/stub/spy assertion library for use with chai.
This library is primarily meant to serve as a starting point for anyone interested in developing chai plugins. If developing a module, you are welcome to use this as a starting point. I also encourage the use of the compile tools to allow modules to work both in node.js and the browser.
Chai spies are available on npm.
$ npm install chai-spies
Include chai-spies.js
after including chai.js
.
<script src="chai-spies.js"></script>
If you are using chai-spies
in the browser, there is nothing you need to do. It will detect chai
in the global
namespace and automatically get used.
If you are using node, here is a useful bit.
var chai = require('chai')
, spies = require('chai-spies');
chai.use(spies);
var should = chai.should()
, expect = chai.expect;
If you are developing an addon for chai, one thing you might find useful is the contents of the support
folder.
This directly contains everything that is needed to package all js files in a directory for browser use. Provided
there are no external dependencies, everything will be packaged and wrapped with a CommonJS require
style loader
by folio, a small JS packaging tool. Please consult the comments in support/compile.js
.
In this module, a spy is either an empty function, or a wrapped named function. Once chai has been extended, you can create a spy through chai's own interface.
function original () {
// do something cool
}
var spy = chai.spy(original);
// then use in place of original
ee.on('some event', spy);
// or use without original
var spy_again = chai.spy();
ee.on('some other event', spy_again);
// or you can track an object's method
var array = [ 1, 2, 3 ];
chai.spy.on(array, 'push');
// or you can track multiple object's methods
chai.spy.on(array, 'push', 'pop');
array.push(5);
// and you can reset the object calls
array.push.reset();
// or you can create spy object
var object = chai.spy.object([ 'push', 'pop' ]);
object.push(5);
// or you create spy which returns static value
var spy = chai.spy.returns(true);
spy(); // true
Asserts that object is a spy.
expect(spy).to.be.spy;
spy.should.be.spy;
Assert that a spy has been called. Negation passes through.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called();
spy.should.have.been.called();
Note that called
can be used as a chainable method.
Assert that a spy has been called with a given argument at least once, even if more arguments were provided.
spy('foo');
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.with('foo');
spy.should.have.been.called.with('foo');
Will also pass for spy('foo', 'bar')
and spy(); spy('foo')
.
If used with multiple arguments, assert that a spy has been called with all the given arguments at least once.
spy('foo', 'bar', 1);
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.with('bar', 'foo');
spy.should.have.been.called.with('bar', 'foo');
Similar to .with, but will pass only if the list of arguments is exactly the same as the one provided.
spy();
spy('foo', 'bar');
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.with.exactly('foo', 'bar');
spy.should.have.been.called.with.exactly('foo', 'bar');
Will not pass for spy('foo')
, spy('bar')
, spy('bar'); spy('foo')
, spy('foo'); spy('bar')
, spy('bar', 'foo')
or
spy('foo', 'bar', 1)
.
Can be used for calls with a single argument too.
Assert that every time the spy has been called the argument list contained the given arguments.
spy('foo');
spy('foo', 'bar');
spy(1, 2, 'foo');
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.always.with('foo');
spy.should.have.been.called.always.with('foo');
Assert that the spy has never been called with a different list of arguments than the one provided.
spy('foo');
spy('foo');
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.always.with.exactly('foo');
spy.should.have.been.called.always.with.exactly('foo');
Assert that a spy has been called exactly once.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.once;
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.once;
spy.should.have.been.called.once;
spy.should.not.have.been.called.once;
Assert that a spy has been called exactly twice.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.twice;
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.twice;
spy.should.have.been.called.twice;
spy.should.not.have.been.called.twice;
Assert that a spy has been called exactly n
times.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.exactly(3);
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.exactly(3);
spy.should.have.been.called.exactly(3);
spy.should.not.have.been.called.exactly(3);
Assert that a spy has been called minimum of n
times.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.min(3);
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.at.least(3);
spy.should.have.been.called.at.least(3);
spy.should.not.have.been.called.min(3);
Assert that a spy has been called maximum of n
times.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.max(3);
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.at.most(3);
spy.should.have.been.called.at.most(3);
spy.should.not.have.been.called.max(3);
Assert that a spy has been called more than n
times.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.above(3);
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.gt(3);
spy.should.have.been.called.gt(3);
spy.should.not.have.been.called.above(3);
Assert that a spy has been called fewer than n
times.
expect(spy).to.have.been.called.below(3);
expect(spy).to.not.have.been.called.lt(3);
spy.should.have.been.called.lt(3);
spy.should.not.have.been.called.below(3);
Tests are written using mocha in the BDD interface.
Node tests can be executed using make test
. Browser tests can be seen by opening test/browser/index.html
.
project : chai-spies repo age : 3 years, 2 months active : 26 days commits : 77 files : 12 authors : 48 Jake Luer 62.3% 7 Glenn Jorde 9.1% 4 Keith Cirkel 5.2% 3 = 3.9% 3 Sergiy Stotskiy 3.9% 2 JamesMaroney 2.6% 2 PG Herveou 2.6% 2 Ryckes 2.6% 1 Veselin Todorov 1.3% 1 Steffen 1.3% 1 Daniel Walker 1.3% 1 Domenic Denicola 1.3% 1 Andre Jaenisch 1.3% 1 PG 1.3%
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2012 Jake Luer jake@alogicalparadox.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
Spies for the Chai assertion library.
The npm package chai-spies-next receives a total of 403 weekly downloads. As such, chai-spies-next popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that chai-spies-next 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.
Did you know?
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