This post follow my previous post on modular library building, but you don't have to read it first.
If you are here, I can bet you're aware of the importance of automated tests.
I wanted to find the most straightforward and easy way to test a browser modular library, so here's my findings.
Test suits
First of all, you need a test suit. There's plenty out there ! Like, a lot !!
Let's review a few and my opinion on each on of them.
Mocha - the flexible
Mocha is the most popular and built for browsers, but has two downsides in my opinion :
- No assertion library built-in
- Wordy compare to others
AVA - the rising-star
To be honest, I like AVA. It has a nice syntax, run tests blazing fast. The only pitfall is that it only support node and need an extra step (and configuration) to work with browser JS.
Jest - the handy
The best solution I found for our needs.
Clear syntax, easy to set-up, fast, clean output ...
The cherry on top is that there's this webpack-jest package that set everything up for you.
Use Jest
This paragraph's gonna be short.
First, add some dev-dependencies.
npm install --save-dev jest jest-webpack
Then, add a "test" script into the package.json file.
"name": "myAwesomePackage",
"scripts": {
"test": "jest-webpack"
}
Finally, run the "test" script.
npm test
That's it !
Write tests
By default, jest grab all file ending with .test.js
, .spec.js
or any files under a __tests__
directory as you prefer.
I'm not going to describe the whole deal, but the jest is pretty easy to grasp. Let me show you a meaningful example.
import Unicorn from "./myAwesomePackage.js";
import somethingElse from "AnotherPackage";
// Wrap this test suit
describe("Unicorn", () => {
// Start every tests with a clean state
let sparkle;
beforeAll(() => {
sparkle = new Unicorn("Sparkle");
});
// Some test
test("instantiate", () => {
// Simple assertion
expect(sparkle instanceof Unicorn).toBe(true);
expect(sparkle.name).toBe("Sparkle");
});
// More test
test("shine", => {
// String assertion
expect(sparkle.shine()).toMatch(/🦄/);
expect(sparkle.shine()).not.toMatch(/đź’©/);
});
// ...
});
Conclusion
You should now be able to test your ES6 code with very little set-up. đź‘Ť
Now, go and try to cover your code-base. But remember, smarter tests are better than a lot tests.
If you want to check a live example, I'm using the very same technique for my project of drawing library.
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