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The library is a regular Javascript module and can be directly imported from a CDN:
import {test} from 'https://unpkg.com/zora@latest/dist/index.js'
test(`hello from zora`, ({ok}) => {
ok(true, 'it worked');
})
(Like in the following codepen)
Or installed via a package manager such NPM by running the command (assuming you have Nodejs installed on your machine):
npm i -D zora
You can then build your testing program by using the exported test
function
import {test} from 'zora';
test(`my very first test`, (assertion) => {
const input = false;
assertion.ok(input, 'input should be truthy');
})
You can run the testing program (with node's runtime for example) and it will start reporting its execution into the console
TAP version 13
# my very first test
not ok 1 - input should be truthy
---
actual: false
expected: "truthy value"
operator: "ok"
at: " file:///path/to/sample.js:5:13"
...
1..1
# tests 1
# pass 0
# fail 1
# skip 0
This output format is called TAP (Test Anything Protocol). It is a standard text based format a machine can easily parse. It means there are plenty of reporters you can pipe the standard output stream into (not only in the Javascript world). This will help you to tailor the reporting for your particular needs.
for example, you can use tap-diff:
node path/to/testing/program.js | tap-diff
You can even use basic bash command:
node path/to/testing/program.js | grep '^not ok\|^\s'
will output a basic, straight to the point test report:
not ok 1 - input should be truthy
---
actual: false
expected: "truthy value"
operator: "ok"
at: " file:///path/to/sample.js:5:13"
...
That is the beauty of using different processes to run the testing program and to format its output: it remains very flexible.
When you start a test suite with the test
function. The spec functions you pass as argument will get an instance of the Assertion object so you can write a wide range of different expectations.
For the best performances, all the spec functions run concurrently unless you specifically wait for them within an asynchronous function (if for some reason, you want to run some test one after the other, in a serial mode).
import {test} from 'zora';
let state = 0;
test('test 1', t => {
t.ok(true);
state++;
});
test('test 2', t => {
//Maybe yes maybe no, you have no guarantee ! In this case it will work as everything is sync
t.equal(state, 1);
});
//Same thing here even in nested tests
test('grouped', t => {
let state = 0;
t.test('test 1', t => {
t.ok(true);
state++;
});
t.test('test 2', t => {
//Maybe yes maybe no, you have no guarantee ! In this case it will work as everything is sync
t.equal(state, 1);
});
});
//And
test('grouped', t=>{
let state = 0;
t.test('test 1', async t=>{
t.ok(true);
await wait(100);
state++;
});
test('test 2', t=>{
t.equal(state, 0, 'see the old state value as it will have started to run before test 1 is done');
});
});
//But
test('grouped', async t => {
let state = 0;
//specifically WAIT for the end of this test before moving on !
await t.test('test 1', async t => {
t.ok(true);
await wait(100);
state++;
});
test('test 2', t => {
t.equal(state, 1, 'see the updated value!');
});
});
You can configure the testing program with environment variables. With nodejs, simply pass it with the command line:
ZORA_REPORTER=json node path/to/testing/program.js
In the browser, you have to set it as a global before the testing program runs:
<script>
window.ZORA_REPORTER='json'
</script>
<script type="module">
import {test} from 'url/to/zora';
test('some test', (t) => {
t.ok(true);
})
</script>
By default, the output is a TAP stream; but you can decide to produce a stream defined by the zora json protocol messages if you which to build a custom reporter on top of it.
Beside the test
function you can use the only
function if you wish to skip all the other tests. However, from the testing program perspective, only
is meaningless: it is just a convenience for a developer, locally on its machine.
So if you wish to use only
you need to pass the ZORA_ONLY
environment variable, otherwise the program will throw an exception to prevent only
statement to slip in the remote versioning control system.
Beware that if you want to run only a nested test suite, all the parent test suites must use the ``only statement:
import {only, test} from 'zora';
test('will be skipped', t => {
t.ok(false);
})
only('some test', t => {
// will be skipped as well
t.test('some nested test', t => {
t.ok(false);
});
// will run
t.only('some other nested test', t => {
t.ok(true);
});
});
In milliseconds: change the default test timeout value (see below)
If a test hangs or takes too long to complete, it will report a failure. By default, the threshold is 5000ms. You can change that global value thanks to the ZORA_TIMEOUT
environment variable.
You can change that value for a given text as well, thanks to the options object:
test(
'broken promise',
({ ok }) => {
return new Promise(() => {}).then(() => {
ok(true);
});
},
{ timeout: 500 }
);
You can skip a test using the root level skip
function or within a test suite using the skip
method of the assertion object
import {skip, test} from 'zora';
skip('will be skipped', t => {
t.ok(false);
})
test('some test', t => {
// will be skipped as well
t.skip('some nested test', t => {
t.ok(false);
});
// will run
t.test('some other nested test', t => {
t.ok(true);
});
});
FAQs
the lightest yet the fastest javascript testing library
The npm package zora receives a total of 140 weekly downloads. As such, zora popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that zora demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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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.
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