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Sinon is a testing utility that provides functions for spies, stubs, and mocks, which are essential for behavior-driven development and testing in JavaScript. It works with any unit testing framework and is widely used for its versatile API and comprehensive feature set.
Spies
Spies are functions that record their usage, such as how many times they were called, with what arguments, and what was returned. They can be used to wrap existing functions to add this tracking ability.
const sinon = require('sinon');
const myFunction = sinon.spy();
myFunction('Hello', 'World');
console.log(myFunction.calledOnce); // true
Stubs
Stubs are like spies, but they can replace the target function's behavior, either by returning a specific value or by throwing an exception. They are useful for controlling a function's behavior in a test.
const sinon = require('sinon');
const myObj = { myMethod: () => 'original' };
const stub = sinon.stub(myObj, 'myMethod').returns('stubbed');
console.log(myObj.myMethod()); // 'stubbed'
Mocks
Mocks are fake methods (like stubs) with pre-programmed behavior and expectations. They are used to assert that certain methods are called in certain ways.
const sinon = require('sinon');
const myObj = { myMethod: () => 'original' };
const mock = sinon.mock(myObj);
mock.expects('myMethod').once().returns('mocked');
console.log(myObj.myMethod()); // 'mocked'
mock.verify();
Jest is a complete testing framework that comes with spies, mocks, and stubs built-in. It is often compared to Sinon for its mocking capabilities, but Jest provides a more integrated experience with a test runner and assertion library included.
Testdouble.js (npm package 'testdouble') is a minimalistic testing library that provides a similar API to Sinon for creating test doubles like stubs, mocks, and spies. It focuses on providing a more user-friendly experience with better error messages and simpler APIs.
Chai-spies is a plugin for the Chai assertion library that adds spy capabilities. While it doesn't offer as comprehensive a set of features as Sinon, it integrates well with Chai for developers who prefer that assertion style.
Standalone and test framework agnostic JavaScript test spies, stubs and mocks.
via npm (node package manager)
$ npm install sinon
via NuGet (package manager for Microsoft development platform)
Install-Package SinonJS
or install via git by cloning the repository and including sinon.js in your project, as you would any other third party library.
Don't forget to include the parts of Sinon.JS that you want to use as well (i.e. spy.js).
See the sinon project homepage for documentation on usage.
If you have questions that are not covered by the documentation, please post them to the Sinon.JS mailing list or drop by #sinon.js on irc.freenode.net:6667
Sinon.JS as source doesn't work with AMD loaders (when they're asynchronous, like loading via script tags in the browser). For that you will have to use a pre-built version. You can either build it yourself or get a numbered version from http://sinonjs.org.
This might or might not change in future versions, depending of outcome of investigations. Please don't report this as a bug, just use pre-built versions.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for details on how you can contribute to Sinon.JS
FAQs
JavaScript test spies, stubs and mocks.
The npm package sinon receives a total of 5,861,189 weekly downloads. As such, sinon popularity was classified as popular.
We found that sinon demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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