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React Components

You're reading from  React Components

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785889288
Pages 182 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Christopher Pitt Christopher Pitt
Profile icon Christopher Pitt

Testing with assertions


Assertions are the spoken/written language constructs made in the code. They look and function similar to how I've been speaking about them. In fact, most tests are structured in the same way we've been describing tests:

  • Given some pre-conditions

  • When something happens

  • We see some post-conditions

The first two points happen as we create objects and components and call their various methods. Assertions happen in the third point. Node.js ships with a few basic assertion methods, which we can use to write our first tests:

import assert from "assert";

assert(
    rendered.match(/<h1 data-reactid=".*">Home<\/h1>/g)
);

There are quite a few assertion methods we can use:

  • assert(condition), assert.ok(condition)

  • assert.equal(actual, expected)

  • assert.notEqual(actual, expected)

  • assert.strictEqual(actual, expected)

  • assert.notStrictEqual(actual, expected)

  • assert.deepEqual(actual, expected)

  • assert.notDeepStrictEqual(actual, expected)

  • assert.throws(function, type)

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