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html-normalizer
Advanced tools
Used to normalize html and jsx to strings so they can be used in assertions.
Normalizer is designed to help you write DOM tests; specifically DOM assertions. Let's test the following HTML.
<div id="testElement" class='some-class' style='display: none; background: red'>
<span>Bob</span>
</div>
There are several assertion libraries with matchers designed to let you inspect DOM elements for properties, classes and style attributes. Those assertions typically look like this:
var dom = document.getElementById("testElement");
expect(dom).toHaveClass("some-class");
expect(dom.children.length).toEqual(1);
expect(dom).toHaveText("Bob");
expect(dom).toBeHidden();
I find that hard to read. Especially when testing large DOM trees. So I tried the following:
var dom = document.getElementById("testElement");
var expectedNode = document.createElement("div");
expectedNode.innerHTML = "<span style='background: red; display: none' class='some-class'><span>Bob</span></span>";
expect(dom.isNodeEqual(expectedNode)).toBeTruthy();
That test works, but when it fails I want to know how nodes differ. I went on to try the following:
var dom = document.getElementById("testElement");
var expectedHTML = "<span style='background: red; display: none' class='some-class'><span>Bob</span></span>";
expect(dom.outerHTML).toEqual(expectedHTML);
The HTML is equal, but this test still fails because the HTML strings differ. The style and the class properties are in different order. I could rearrange them, but that would make for a brittle test. Also I really don't care to test that the background is red. I need a library to normalize the HTML (alphabetize / properties and styles) and let me white list the properties I want to test. Normalizer is that library. Using normalizer I can write:
var Normalizer = require("Normalizer");
var normalizer = new Normalizer();
var dom = document.getElementById("testElement");
var expectedHTML = "<span style='display: none' class='some-class'><span>Bob</span></span>";
var actual = normalizer.domNode(dom); //method to normalize a DOM node
var expected = = normalizer.domString(dom); //method to normalize a DOM string
expect(actual).toEqual(expected);
Concatenating HTML strings is no fun. Normalizer can normalize JSX components. Your project does not have to use React for you to write your assertions with JSX. You can normalize your dom node (maybe it a Backbone.el) and write your expectation using JSX. Your test can look like this:
var Normalizer = require("Normalizer");
var normalizer = new Normalizer();
var dom = document.getElementById("testElement");
var expectedHTML = (
<span style={{display: none}} className='some-class'>
<span>Bob</span>
</span>
);
var actual = normalizer.domNode(dom); //method to normalize a DOM node
var expected = = normalizer.reactComponent(expectedHTML); //method to normalize a JSX component
expect(actual).toEqual(expected);
Normalizer's constructor Normalizer(attributes, styles)
takes 2 optional arguments.
["style", "class"]
["display"]
Normalizer can return a normalized HTML string for 4 types of input.
normalizer.reactView(reactView)
normalizer.reactComponent(reactComponent)
normalizer.domNode(domNode)
normalizer.domString(htmlString)
script type="text/jsx"
tagsFAQs
Used to normalize html and jsx to strings so they can be used in assertions.
The npm package html-normalizer receives a total of 30 weekly downloads. As such, html-normalizer popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that html-normalizer demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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