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[![npm package](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/mock-build)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/mock-build) [![Node.js version](https://img.shields.io/badge/node-%3E%3D%2018.12-brightgreen)](https://nodejs.org/en/) [![GitHub Release](https://github.com/seek-oss/m
Create reusable mocks using the builder pattern in Typescript
yarn add mock-build
interface UserInfo {
id: number;
userName: string;
email: string;
}
const userInfo = mockBuilder<UserInfo>()
.id(1)
.userName('foo')
.email('foo@bar.baz')
.build();
A note of caution: when building objects from scratch, the builder currently cannot ensure that all mandatory fields have been set. The built object might thus violate the contract of the given interface. For example, the following will compile (see also the example in the tests):
const brokenUserInfo = mockBuilder<UserInfo>().build();
A way around this is to use template objects (see Usage with template objects).
Another way is to use strictMockBuilder (see Usage with strictMockBuilder).
const baseUserInfo = mockBuilder<UserInfo>()
.id(1)
.userName('foo')
.email('foo@bar.baz');
const userInfo = baseUserInfo.id(2).build();
// {
// id: 2,
// userName: "foo",
// email: "foo@bar.baz"
// }
const otherUserInfo = baseUserInfo.id(3).build();
// {
// id: 3,
// userName: "foo",
// email: "foo@bar.baz"
// }
You can also specify a template object, which allows easy creation of variation of objects. This is especially useful for making test data setup more readable:
const defaultUserInfo: UserInfo = {
id: 1,
userName: 'foo',
email: 'foo@bar.baz',
};
const modifiedUserInfo = mockBuilder(defaultUserInfo).id(2).build();
Notes:
You can also specify a class object.
class UserInfo {
id!: number;
userName!: string;
email!: string;
}
const userInfo = mockBuilder(UserInfo) // note that ( ) is used instead of < > here
.id(1)
.userName('foo')
.email('foo@bar.baz')
.build();
Moreover, you can also specify a class object with a template object.
class UserInfo {
id!: number;
userName!: string;
email!: string;
}
const userInfo = mockBuilder(UserInfo, {id: 1, userName: 'foo'})
.userName:('foo bar')
.email('foo@bar.baz')
.build();
strictMockBuilder
is used to make sure all variables are initialized.
interface UserInfo {
id: number;
userName: string;
email: string;
}
const userInfo = strictMockBuilder<UserInfo>().id(1).build(); // This expression is not callable.
// Type 'never' has no call signatures.ts(2349)
All variables must be initialized before calling build()
.
const userInfo = strictMockBuilder<UserInfo>()
.id(1)
.userName('foo')
.email('foo@bar.baz')
.build(); // build() is called successfully
Notes:
strictMockBuilder
does not support classes.
git checkout -b my-new-feature
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
git push origin my-new-feature
https://github.com/Vincent-Pang/builder-pattern is the original repository that this was forked from.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details
1.0.3
FAQs
[![npm package](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/mock-build)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/mock-build) [![Node.js version](https://img.shields.io/badge/node-%3E%3D%2018.12-brightgreen)](https://nodejs.org/en/) [![GitHub Release](https://github.com/seek-oss/m
The npm package mock-build receives a total of 750 weekly downloads. As such, mock-build popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that mock-build demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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