
Research
Security News
Malicious PyPI Package Exploits Deezer API for Coordinated Music Piracy
Socket researchers uncovered a malicious PyPI package exploiting Deezer’s API to enable coordinated music piracy through API abuse and C2 server control.
jasmine-expect
Advanced tools
Overview | Installation | Matchers | Asymmetric Matchers | Integration | Browser Support
A huge library of test matchers for a range of common use-cases, compatible with all versions of Jasmine and Jest.
Custom Matchers make tests easier to read and produce relevant and useful messages when they fail.
By avoiding vague messages such as "expected false to be true" in favour of
useful cues such as "expected 3 to be even number" and avoiding implementation
noise such as expect(cycleWheels % 2 === 0).toEqual(true)
in favour of simply
stating that you expect(cycleWheels).toBeEvenNumber()
.
npm install jasmine-expect --save-dev
bower install jasmine-expect --save-dev
Downloads are available on the releases page.
The Jasmine testing framework from Pivotal Labs comes with this default set of matchers:
expect(instance).toBe(instance);
expect(number).toBeCloseTo(number, decimalPlaces);
expect(mixed).toBeDefined();
expect(mixed).toBeFalsy();
expect(number).toBeGreaterThan(number);
expect(number).toBeLessThan(number);
expect(number).toBeNaN();
expect(mixed).toBeNull();
expect(mixed).toBeTruthy();
expect(mixed).toBeUndefined();
expect(array).toContain(member);
expect(mixed).toEqual(mixed);
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalled();
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(number);
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalledWith(...arguments);
expect(mixed).toMatch(pattern);
expect(fn).toThrow(string);
expect(fn).toThrowError(string);
and this default set of asymmetric matchers;
jasmine.any(Constructor);
jasmine.anything(mixed);
jasmine.arrayContaining(mixed);
jasmine.objectContaining(mixed);
jasmine.stringMatching(pattern);
Jasmine-Matchers adds the following matchers:
expect(array).toBeArray();
expect(array).toBeArrayOfBooleans();
expect(array).toBeArrayOfNumbers();
expect(array).toBeArrayOfObjects();
expect(array).toBeArrayOfSize(number);
expect(array).toBeArrayOfStrings();
expect(array).toBeEmptyArray();
expect(array).toBeNonEmptyArray();
expect(boolean).toBeBoolean();
expect(boolean).toBeFalse();
expect(boolean).toBeTrue();
expect(date).toBeAfter(otherDate);
expect(date).toBeBefore(otherDate);
expect(date).toBeDate();
expect(date).toBeValidDate();
expect(fn).toBeFunction();
expect(fn).toThrowAnyError();
expect(fn).toThrowErrorOfType(constructorName);
expect(mixed).toBeCalculable();
expect(number).toBeEvenNumber();
expect(number).toBeGreaterThanOrEqualTo(otherNumber);
expect(number).toBeLessThanOrEqualTo(otherNumber);
expect(number).toBeNear(otherNumber, epsilon);
expect(number).toBeNumber();
expect(number).toBeOddNumber();
expect(number).toBeWholeNumber();
expect(number).toBeWithinRange(floor, ceiling);
expect(object).toBeEmptyObject();
expect(object).toBeNonEmptyObject();
expect(object).toBeObject();
expect(object).toHaveArray(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveArrayOfBooleans(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveArrayOfNumbers(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveArrayOfObjects(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveArrayOfSize(memberName, size);
expect(object).toHaveArrayOfStrings(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveBoolean(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveCalculable(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveDate(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveDateAfter(memberName, date);
expect(object).toHaveDateBefore(memberName, date);
expect(object).toHaveEmptyArray(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveEmptyObject(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveEmptyString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveEvenNumber(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveFalse(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveHtmlString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveIso8601(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveJsonString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveMember(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveMethod(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveNonEmptyArray(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveNonEmptyObject(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveNonEmptyString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveNumber(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveNumberWithinRange(memberName, floor, ceiling);
expect(object).toHaveObject(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveOddNumber(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveStringLongerThan(memberName, string);
expect(object).toHaveStringSameLengthAs(memberName, string);
expect(object).toHaveStringShorterThan(memberName, string);
expect(object).toHaveTrue(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveUndefined(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveWhitespaceString(memberName);
expect(object).toHaveWholeNumber(memberName);
expect(regexp).toBeRegExp();
expect(string).toBeEmptyString();
expect(string).toBeHtmlString();
expect(string).toBeIso8601();
expect(string).toBeJsonString();
expect(string).toBeLongerThan();
expect(string).toBeNonEmptyString();
expect(string).toBeSameLengthAs();
expect(string).toBeShorterThan();
expect(string).toBeString();
expect(string).toBeWhitespace();
expect(string).toEndWith(substring);
expect(string).toStartWith(substring);
any.after(date);
any.arrayOfBooleans();
any.arrayOfNumbers();
any.arrayOfObjects();
any.arrayOfSize(number);
any.arrayOfStrings();
any.before(date);
any.calculable();
any.emptyArray();
any.emptyObject();
any.endingWith(string);
any.evenNumber();
any.greaterThanOrEqualTo(number);
any.iso8601();
any.jsonString();
any.lessThanOrEqualTo(number);
any.longerThan(string);
any.nonEmptyArray();
any.nonEmptyObject();
any.nonEmptyString();
any.oddNumber();
any.regExp();
any.sameLengthAs(string);
any.shorterThan(string);
any.startingWith(string);
any.whitespace();
any.wholeNumber();
any.withinRange(floor, ceiling);
Embed jasmine-matchers.js after Jasmine but before your tests.
Include the following in your package.json
:
"unmockedModulePathPatterns": ["jasmine-expect"]
And the following at the top of your test suite:
import JasmineExpect from 'jasmine-expect';
Integration is easy with the karma-jasmine-matchers plugin.
Use the Jasmine CLI and include the path to where Jasmine Matchers is installed in the helpers
array of your spec/support/jasmine.json
.
{
"spec_dir": "spec",
"spec_files": ["../src/**/*.spec.js"],
"helpers": ["../node_modules/jasmine-expect/index.js"],
"stopSpecOnExpectationFailure": false,
"random": false
}
If you are using TypeScript, you might want to
npm install @types/jasmine-expect --save-dev
in order to prevent your IDE from
complaining about the new Matchers.
Also, if you run into TypeScript compilation errors when running your tests,
add "jasmine-expect"
to the "types"
array in your tests' tsconfig
file.
As an example, for an Angular CLI based project, this would be your
tsconfig.spec.json
file:
{
"extends": "../tsconfig.json",
"compilerOptions": {
"outDir": "../out-tsc/spec",
"baseUrl": "./",
"module": "commonjs",
"target": "es5",
"types": [
"jasmine",
"node",
"jasmine-expect"
]
},
"files": [
"test.ts"
],
"include": [
"**/*.spec.ts",
"**/*.d.ts"
]
}
Jasmine-Matchers-Snippets or Jasmine-Matchers-ES6-Snippets can be installed with Package Control to ease development with Jasmine Matchers in Sublime Text.
There is a Plugin for Tern to auto-complete matchers in your Text Editor.
Jasmine-Matchers is tested on Travis CI and BrowserStack against the following environments.
Browser | Version Range |
---|---|
Android | 4.0 - 5.1 |
Chrome | 26 - 52 |
Firefox | 4 - 48 |
Internet Explorer | 9 - Edge |
iOS | 6.0 - 9.3* |
Opera | 11 - 12 |
Safari | 6 - 9* |
* Safari 5.1 and iOS 5.1 are actually fully supported except for toBeIso8601
.
FAQs
Write Beautiful Specs with Custom Matchers
The npm package jasmine-expect receives a total of 30,647 weekly downloads. As such, jasmine-expect popularity was classified as popular.
We found that jasmine-expect 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?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncovered a malicious PyPI package exploiting Deezer’s API to enable coordinated music piracy through API abuse and C2 server control.
Research
The Socket Research Team discovered a malicious npm package, '@ton-wallet/create', stealing cryptocurrency wallet keys from developers and users in the TON ecosystem.
Security News
Newly introduced telemetry in devenv 1.4 sparked a backlash over privacy concerns, leading to the removal of its AI-powered feature after strong community pushback.