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194 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
194 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
## Assertions
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To help developers write tests the Deno standard library comes with a built in
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[assertions module](https://deno.land/std/testing/asserts.ts) which can be
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imported from `https://deno.land/std/testing/asserts.ts`.
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```js
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import { assert } from "https://deno.land/std/testing/asserts.ts";
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Deno.test("Hello Test", () => {
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assert("Hello");
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});
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```
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The assertions module provides nine assertions:
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- `assert(expr: unknown, msg = ""): asserts expr`
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- `assertEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void`
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- `assertNotEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void`
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- `assertStrictEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void`
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- `assertStringContains(actual: string, expected: string, msg?: string): void`
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- `assertArrayContains(actual: unknown[], expected: unknown[], msg?: string): void`
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- `assertMatch(actual: string, expected: RegExp, msg?: string): void`
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- `assertThrows(fn: () => void, ErrorClass?: Constructor, msgIncludes = "", msg?: string): Error`
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- `assertThrowsAsync(fn: () => Promise<void>, ErrorClass?: Constructor, msgIncludes = "", msg?: string): Promise<Error>`
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### Assert
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The assert method is a simple 'truthy' assertion and can be used to assert any
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value which can be inferred as true.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert", () => {
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assert(1);
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assert("Hello");
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assert(true);
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});
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```
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### Equality
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There are three equality assertions available, `assertEquals()`,
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`assertNotEquals()` and `assertStrictEquals()`.
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The `assertEquals()` and `assertNotEquals()` methods provide a general equality
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check and are capable of asserting equality between primitive types and objects.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Equals", () => {
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assertEquals(1, 1);
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assertEquals("Hello", "Hello");
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assertEquals(true, true);
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assertEquals(undefined, undefined);
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assertEquals(null, null);
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assertEquals(new Date(), new Date());
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assertEquals(new RegExp("abc"), new RegExp("abc"));
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class Foo {}
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const foo1 = new Foo();
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const foo2 = new Foo();
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assertEquals(foo1, foo2);
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});
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Deno.test("Test Assert Not Equals", () => {
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assertNotEquals(1, 2);
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assertNotEquals("Hello", "World");
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assertNotEquals(true, false);
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assertNotEquals(undefined, "");
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assertNotEquals(new Date(), Date.now());
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assertNotEquals(new RegExp("abc"), new RegExp("def"));
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});
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```
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By contrast `assertStrictEquals()` provides a simpler, stricter equality check
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based on the `===` operator. As a result it will not assert two instances of
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identical objects as they won't be referentially the same.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Strict Equals", () => {
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assertStrictEquals(1, 1);
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assertStrictEquals("Hello", "Hello");
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assertStrictEquals(true, true);
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assertStrictEquals(undefined, undefined);
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});
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```
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The `assertStrictEquals()` assertion is best used when you wish to make a
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precise check against two primitive types.
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### Contains
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There are two methods available to assert a value contains a value,
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`assertStringContains()` and `assertArrayContains()`.
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The `assertStringContains()` assertion does a simple includes check on a string
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to see if it contains the expected string.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert String Contains", () => {
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assertStringContains("Hello World", "Hello");
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});
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```
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The `assertArrayContains()` assertion is slightly more advanced and can find
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both a value within an array and an array of values within an array.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Array Contains", () => {
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assertArrayContains([1, 2, 3], [1]);
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assertArrayContains([1, 2, 3], [1, 2]);
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assertArrayContains(Array.from("Hello World"), Array.from("Hello"));
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});
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```
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### Regex
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You can assert regular expressions via the `assertMatch()` assertion.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Match", () => {
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assertMatch("abcdefghi", new RegExp("def"));
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const basicUrl = new RegExp("^https?://[a-z.]+.com$");
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assertMatch("https://www.google.com", basicUrl);
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assertMatch("http://facebook.com", basicUrl);
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});
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```
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### Throws
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There are two ways to assert whether something throws an error in Deno,
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`assertThrows()` and `assertAsyncThrows()`. Both assertions allow you to check
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an
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[Error](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Error)
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has been thrown, the type of error thrown and what the message was.
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The difference between the two assertions is `assertThrows()` accepts a standard
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function and `assertAsyncThrows()` accepts a function which returns a
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[Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise).
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The `assertThrows()` assertion will check an error has been thrown, and
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optionally will check the thrown error is of the correct type, and assert the
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error message is as expected.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Throws", () => {
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assertThrows(
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() => {
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throw new Error("Panic!");
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},
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Error,
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"Panic!"
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);
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});
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```
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The `assertAsyncThrows()` assertion is a little more complicated, mainly because
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it deals with Promises. But basically it will catch thrown errors or rejections
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in Promises. You can also optionally check for the error type and error message.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Throws Async", () => {
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assertThrowsAsync(
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() => {
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return new Promise(() => {
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throw new Error("Panic! Threw Error");
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});
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},
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Error,
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"Panic! Threw Error"
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);
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assertThrowsAsync(
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() => {
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return Promise.reject(new Error("Panic! Reject Error"));
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},
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Error,
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"Panic! Reject Error"
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);
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});
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```
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### Custom Messages
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Each of Deno's built in assertions allow you to overwrite the standard CLI error
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message if you wish. For instance this example will output "Values Don't Match!"
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rather than the standard CLI error message.
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```js
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Deno.test("Test Assert Equal Fail Custom Message", () => {
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assertEquals(1, 2, "Values Don't Match!");
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});
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```
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