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You're reading from  Mastering TypeScript - Fourth Edition

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2021
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781800564732
Edition4th Edition
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Nathan Rozentals
Nathan Rozentals
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Nathan Rozentals

Nathan Rozentals has been writing commercial software for over 30 years, in C, C++, Java and C#. He picked up TypeScript within a week after its initial release in October 2012 and realized how much TypeScript could help when writing JavaScript. He was one of the first people to start blogging about TypeScript, discussing early frameworks such as Backbone, Marionette, ExtJS and AngularJs. He knew he'd hit the mark when Microsoft staff started to reference his blog posts in their CodePlex discussion forums. Nathan's TypeScript solutions now control User Interfaces in IoT devices, run as stand-alone applications for Point-of-Sale solutions, provide complex application configuration web sites, and are used for mission-critical server APIs.
Read more about Nathan Rozentals

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Asynchronous tests

As we have seen with our exploration of JavaScript and TypeScript, a lot of code we write is asynchronous. This means that we have no control of exactly when a callback will be invoked, or a Promise will resolve, as we are waiting for an event to occur that is outside of our control. This often presents problems in our unit testing, where we need to wait for an asynchronous event to complete before we can continue with our test. As an example of this, consider the following class:

class MockAsync {
    executeSlowFunction(
        complete: (value: string) => void
    ) {
        setTimeout(() => {
            complete(`completed`);
        }, 1000);
    }
}

Here, we have a class named MockAsync that has a single method named executeSlowFunction. This function takes a callback function named complete as its only parameter, and then invokes it after 1 second. We might write a test for this class as follows:

describe("failing async tests"...
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Mastering TypeScript - Fourth Edition
Published in: Apr 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781800564732

Author (1)

author image
Nathan Rozentals

Nathan Rozentals has been writing commercial software for over 30 years, in C, C++, Java and C#. He picked up TypeScript within a week after its initial release in October 2012 and realized how much TypeScript could help when writing JavaScript. He was one of the first people to start blogging about TypeScript, discussing early frameworks such as Backbone, Marionette, ExtJS and AngularJs. He knew he'd hit the mark when Microsoft staff started to reference his blog posts in their CodePlex discussion forums. Nathan's TypeScript solutions now control User Interfaces in IoT devices, run as stand-alone applications for Point-of-Sale solutions, provide complex application configuration web sites, and are used for mission-critical server APIs.
Read more about Nathan Rozentals