std/expect/expect.ts

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// Copyright 2018-2024 the Deno authors. All rights reserved. MIT license.
// This module is browser compatible.
// Copyright 2019 Allain Lalonde. All rights reserved. ISC License.
// Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
// The documentation is extracted from https://github.com/jestjs/jest/blob/main/website/versioned_docs/version-29.7/ExpectAPI.md
// and updated for the Deno ecosystem.
import type {
Expected,
ExtendMatchResult,
Matcher,
MatcherContext,
MatcherKey,
Matchers,
} from "./_types.ts";
import { AssertionError } from "@std/assert/assertion-error";
import {
assertions,
emitAssertionTrigger,
hasAssertions,
} from "./_assertions.ts";
import {
addCustomEqualityTesters,
getCustomEqualityTesters,
} from "./_custom_equality_tester.ts";
import { equal } from "./_equal.ts";
import { getExtendMatchers, setExtendMatchers } from "./_extend.ts";
import {
toBe,
toBeCloseTo,
toBeDefined,
toBeFalsy,
toBeGreaterThan,
toBeGreaterThanOrEqual,
toBeInstanceOf,
toBeLessThan,
toBeLessThanOrEqual,
toBeNaN,
toBeNull,
toBeTruthy,
toBeUndefined,
toContain,
toContainEqual,
toEqual,
toHaveBeenCalled,
toHaveBeenCalledTimes,
toHaveBeenCalledWith,
toHaveBeenLastCalledWith,
toHaveBeenNthCalledWith,
toHaveLastReturnedWith,
toHaveLength,
toHaveNthReturnedWith,
toHaveProperty,
toHaveReturned,
toHaveReturnedTimes,
toHaveReturnedWith,
toMatch,
toMatchObject,
toStrictEqual,
toThrow,
} from "./_matchers.ts";
import { addSerializer } from "./_serializer.ts";
import { isPromiseLike } from "./_utils.ts";
import * as asymmetricMatchers from "./_asymmetric_matchers.ts";
import type { SnapshotPlugin, Tester } from "./_types.ts";
export type { AnyConstructor, Async, Expected } from "./_types.ts";
const matchers: Record<MatcherKey, Matcher> = {
lastCalledWith: toHaveBeenLastCalledWith,
lastReturnedWith: toHaveLastReturnedWith,
nthCalledWith: toHaveBeenNthCalledWith,
nthReturnedWith: toHaveNthReturnedWith,
toBeCalled: toHaveBeenCalled,
toBeCalledTimes: toHaveBeenCalledTimes,
toBeCalledWith: toHaveBeenCalledWith,
toBeCloseTo,
toBeDefined,
toBeFalsy,
toBeGreaterThanOrEqual,
toBeGreaterThan,
toBeInstanceOf,
toBeLessThanOrEqual,
toBeLessThan,
toBeNaN,
toBeNull,
toBeTruthy,
toBeUndefined,
toBe,
toContainEqual,
toContain,
toEqual,
toHaveBeenCalledTimes,
toHaveBeenCalledWith,
toHaveBeenCalled,
toHaveBeenLastCalledWith,
toHaveBeenNthCalledWith,
toHaveLength,
toHaveLastReturnedWith,
toHaveNthReturnedWith,
toHaveProperty,
toHaveReturnedTimes,
toHaveReturnedWith,
toHaveReturned,
toMatchObject,
toMatch,
toReturn: toHaveReturned,
toReturnTimes: toHaveReturnedTimes,
toReturnWith: toHaveReturnedWith,
toStrictEqual,
toThrow,
};
/**
* **Note:** the documentation for this module is taken from [Jest](https://github.com/jestjs/jest/blob/main/website/versioned_docs/version-29.7/ExpectAPI.md)
* and the examples are updated for Deno.
*
* The `expect` function is used to test a value. You will use `expect` along with a
* "matcher" function to assert something about a value.
*
* @example Usage
* ```ts no-assert
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* function bestLaCroixFlavor(): string {
* return "grapefruit";
* }
*
* Deno.test("the best flavor is grapefruit", () => {
* expect(bestLaCroixFlavor()).toBe("grapefruit");
* });
* ```
*
* In this case, `toBe` is the matcher function. There are a lot of different
* matcher functions, documented in the main module description.
*
* The argument to `expect` should be the value that your code produces, and any
* argument to the matcher should be the correct value. If you mix them up, your
* tests will still work, but the error messages on failing tests will look
* strange.
*
* @param value The value to perform assertions on.
* @param customMessage An optional custom message to include in the assertion error.
* @returns An expected object that can be used to chain matchers.
*
* @typeParam T The interface used for `expect`. This is usually needed only if you want to use `expect.extend` to create custom matchers.
*/
export function expect<T extends Expected = Expected>(
value: unknown,
customMessage?: string,
): T {
let isNot = false;
let isPromised = false;
const self: T = new Proxy<T>(<T> {}, {
get(_, name) {
if (name === "not") {
isNot = !isNot;
return self;
}
if (name === "resolves") {
if (!isPromiseLike(value)) {
throw new AssertionError("Expected value must be PromiseLike");
}
isPromised = true;
return self;
}
if (name === "rejects") {
if (!isPromiseLike(value)) {
throw new AssertionError("Expected value must be a PromiseLike");
}
value = value.then(
(value) => {
throw new AssertionError(
`Promise did not reject: resolved to ${value}`,
);
},
(err) => err,
);
isPromised = true;
return self;
}
const extendMatchers: Matchers = getExtendMatchers();
const allMatchers = {
...matchers,
...extendMatchers,
};
const matcher = allMatchers[name as MatcherKey] as Matcher;
if (!matcher) {
throw new TypeError(
typeof name === "string"
? `matcher not found: ${name}`
: "matcher not found",
);
}
return (...args: unknown[]) => {
function applyMatcher(value: unknown, args: unknown[]) {
const context: MatcherContext = {
value,
equal,
isNot: false,
customMessage,
customTesters: getCustomEqualityTesters(),
};
if (isNot) {
context.isNot = true;
}
if (name in extendMatchers) {
const result = matcher(context, ...args) as ExtendMatchResult;
if (context.isNot) {
if (result.pass) {
throw new AssertionError(result.message());
}
} else if (!result.pass) {
throw new AssertionError(result.message());
}
} else {
matcher(context, ...args);
}
emitAssertionTrigger();
}
return isPromised
? (value as Promise<unknown>).then((value: unknown) =>
applyMatcher(value, args)
)
: applyMatcher(value, args);
};
},
});
return self;
}
/**
* You can use `expect.addEqualityTesters` to add your own methods to test if two
* objects are equal. For example, let's say you have a class in your code that
* represents volume and can determine if two volumes using different units are
* equal. You may want `toEqual` (and other equality matchers) to use this custom
* equality method when comparing to Volume classes. You can add a custom equality
* tester to have `toEqual` detect and apply custom logic when comparing Volume
* classes:
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* class Volume {
* amount: number;
* unit: "L" | "mL";
*
* constructor(amount: number, unit: "L" | "mL") {
* this.amount = amount;
* this.unit = unit;
* }
*
* toString() {
* return `[Volume ${this.amount}${this.unit}]`;
* }
*
* equals(other: Volume) {
* if (this.unit === other.unit) {
* return this.amount === other.amount;
* } else if (this.unit === "L" && other.unit === "mL") {
* return this.amount * 1000 === other.amount;
* } else {
* return this.amount === other.amount * 1000;
* }
* }
* }
*
* function areVolumesEqual(a: Volume, b: Volume) {
* const isAVolume = a instanceof Volume;
* const isBVolume = b instanceof Volume;
* if (isAVolume && isBVolume) {
* return a.equals(b);
* } else if (isAVolume === isBVolume) {
* return undefined;
* } else {
* return false;
* }
* }
*
* expect.addEqualityTesters([areVolumesEqual]);
*
* Deno.test("are equal with different units", () => {
* expect(new Volume(1, "L")).toEqual(new Volume(1000, "mL"));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.addEqualityTesters = addCustomEqualityTesters as (
newTesters: Tester[],
) => void;
/**
* Extend `expect()` with custom provided matchers.
*
* To do so, you will need to extend the interface `Expected` to define the new signature of the `expect`.
*
* ```ts
* import type { Async, Expected } from "./expect.ts";
* import { expect } from "./expect.ts";
*
* // Extends the `Expected` interface with your new matchers signatures
* interface ExtendedExpected<IsAsync = false> extends Expected<IsAsync> {
* // Matcher that asserts value is a dinosaur
* toBeDinosaur: (options?: { includeTrexs?: boolean }) => unknown;
*
* // NOTE: You also need to overrides the following typings to allow modifiers to correctly infer typing
* not: IsAsync extends true ? Async<ExtendedExpected<true>>
* : ExtendedExpected<false>;
* resolves: Async<ExtendedExpected<true>>;
* rejects: Async<ExtendedExpected<true>>;
* }
*
* // Call `expect.extend()` with your new matchers definitions
* expect.extend({
* toBeDinosaur(context, options) {
* const dino = `${context.value}`;
* const allowed = ["🦕"];
* if (options?.includeTrexs) {
* allowed.push("🦖");
* }
* const pass = allowed.includes(dino);
* if (context.isNot) {
* // Note: when `context.isNot` is set, the test is considered successful when `pass` is false
* return {
* message: () => `Expected "${dino}" to NOT be a dinosaur`,
* pass,
* };
* }
* return { message: () => `Expected "${dino}" to be a dinosaur`, pass };
* },
* });
*
* // Alias expect to avoid having to pass the generic typing argument each time
* // This is probably what you want to export and reuse across your tests
* const myexpect = expect<ExtendedExpected>;
*
* // Perform some tests
* myexpect("🦕").toBeDinosaur();
* myexpect("🦧").not.toBeDinosaur();
* await myexpect(Promise.resolve("🦕")).resolves.toBeDinosaur();
* await myexpect(Promise.resolve("🦧")).resolves.not.toBeDinosaur();
*
* // Regular matchers will still be available
* myexpect("foo").not.toBeNull()
* myexpect.anything
* ```
*/
expect.extend = setExtendMatchers as (newExtendMatchers: Matchers) => void;
/**
* `expect.anything()` matches anything but `null` or `undefined`. You can use it
* inside `toEqual` or `toHaveBeenCalledWith` instead of a literal value.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect, fn } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("map calls its argument with a non-null argument", () => {
* const mock = fn();
* [1].map((x) => mock(x));
* expect(mock).toHaveBeenCalledWith(expect.anything());
* });
```
*/
expect.anything = asymmetricMatchers.anything as () => ReturnType<
typeof asymmetricMatchers.anything
>;
/**
* `expect.any(constructor)` matches anything that was created with the given
* constructor or if it's a primitive that is of the passed type. You can use it
* inside `toEqual` or `toHaveBeenCalledWith` instead of a literal value.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* class Cat {}
* Deno.test("expect.any()", () => {
* expect(new Cat()).toEqual(expect.any(Cat));
* expect("Hello").toEqual(expect.any(String));
* expect(1).toEqual(expect.any(Number));
* expect(() => {}).toEqual(expect.any(Function));
* expect(false).toEqual(expect.any(Boolean));
* expect(BigInt(1)).toEqual(expect.any(BigInt));
* expect(Symbol("sym")).toEqual(expect.any(Symbol));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.any = asymmetricMatchers.any as (
c: unknown,
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.any>;
/**
* `expect.arrayContaining(array)` matches a received array which contains all of
* the elements in the expected array. That is, the expected array is a **subset**
* of the received array. Therefore, it matches a received array which contains
* elements that are **not** in the expected array.
*
* You can use it instead of a literal value:
*
* - in `toEqual` or `toHaveBeenCalledWith`
* - to match a property in `objectContaining` or `toMatchObject`
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("expect.arrayContaining() with array of numbers", () => {
* const arr = [1, 2, 3];
* expect([1, 2, 3, 4]).toEqual(expect.arrayContaining(arr));
* expect([4, 5, 6]).not.toEqual(expect.arrayContaining(arr));
* expect([1, 2, 3]).toEqual(expect.arrayContaining(arr));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.arrayContaining = asymmetricMatchers.arrayContaining as (
// deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any
c: any[],
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.arrayContaining>;
/**
* `expect.closeTo(number, numDigits?)` is useful when comparing floating point
* numbers in object properties or array item. If you need to compare a number,
* please use `.toBeCloseTo` instead.
*
* The optional `numDigits` argument limits the number of digits to check **after**
* the decimal point. For the default value `2`, the test criterion is
* `Math.abs(expected - received) < 0.005 (that is, 10 ** -2 / 2)`.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("compare float in object properties", () => {
* expect({
* title: "0.1 + 0.2",
* sum: 0.1 + 0.2,
* }).toEqual({
* title: "0.1 + 0.2",
* sum: expect.closeTo(0.3, 5),
* });
* });
* ```
*/
expect.closeTo = asymmetricMatchers.closeTo as (
num: number,
numDigits?: number,
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.closeTo>;
/**
* `expect.stringContaining(string)` matches the received value if it is a string
* that contains the exact expected string.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("expect.stringContaining() with strings", () => {
* expect("https://deno.com/").toEqual(expect.stringContaining("deno"));
* expect("function").toEqual(expect.stringContaining("func"));
*
* expect("Hello, World").not.toEqual(expect.stringContaining("hello"));
* expect("foobar").not.toEqual(expect.stringContaining("bazz"));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.stringContaining = asymmetricMatchers.stringContaining as (
str: string,
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.stringContaining>;
/**
* `expect.stringMatching(string | regexp)` matches the received value if it is a
* string that matches the expected string or regular expression.
*
* You can use it instead of a literal value:
*
* - in `toEqual` or `toHaveBeenCalledWith`
* - to match an element in `arrayContaining`
* - to match a property in `objectContaining` (not available yet) or `toMatchObject`
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("example", () => {
* expect("deno_std").toEqual(expect.stringMatching(/std/));
* expect("0123456789").toEqual(expect.stringMatching(/\d+/));
* expect("e").not.toEqual(expect.stringMatching(/\s/));
* expect("queue").not.toEqual(expect.stringMatching(/en/));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.stringMatching = asymmetricMatchers.stringMatching as (
pattern: string | RegExp,
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.stringMatching>;
/**
* `expect.hasAssertions` verifies that at least one assertion is called during a test.
*
* Note: expect.hasAssertions only can use in bdd function test suite, such as `test` or `it`.
*
* @example
* ```ts
*
* import { test } from "@std/testing/bdd";
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* test("it works", () => {
* expect.hasAssertions();
* expect("a").not.toBe("b");
* });
* ```
*/
expect.hasAssertions = hasAssertions as () => void;
/**
* `expect.assertions` verifies that a certain number of assertions are called during a test.
*
* Note: expect.assertions only can use in bdd function test suite, such as `test` or `it`.
*
* @example
* ```ts
*
* import { test } from "@std/testing/bdd";
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* test("it works", () => {
* expect.assertions(1);
* expect("a").not.toBe("b");
* });
* ```
*/
expect.assertions = assertions as (num: number) => void;
/**
* `expect.objectContaining(object)` matches any received object that recursively matches the expected properties.
* That is, the expected object is not a subset of the received object. Therefore, it matches a received object
* which contains properties that are not in the expected object.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("example", () => {
* expect({ bar: 'baz' }).toEqual(expect.objectContaining({ bar: 'bar'}));
* expect({ bar: 'baz' }).not.toEqual(expect.objectContaining({ foo: 'bar'}));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.objectContaining = asymmetricMatchers.objectContaining as (
obj: Record<string, unknown>,
) => ReturnType<typeof asymmetricMatchers.objectContaining>;
/**
* `expect.not.arrayContaining` matches a received array which does not contain
* all of the elements in the expected array. That is, the expected array is not
* a subset of the received array.
*
* `expect.not.objectContaining` matches any received object that does not recursively
* match the expected properties. That is, the expected object is not a subset of the
* received object. Therefore, it matches a received object which contains properties
* that are not in the expected object.
*
* `expect.not.stringContaining` matches the received value if it is not a string
* or if it is a string that does not contain the exact expected string.
*
* `expect.not.stringMatching` matches the received value if it is not a string
* or if it is a string that does not match the expected string or regular expression.
*
* @example
* ```ts
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
*
* Deno.test("expect.not.arrayContaining", () => {
* const expected = ["Samantha"];
* expect(["Alice", "Bob", "Eve"]).toEqual(expect.not.arrayContaining(expected));
* });
*
* Deno.test("expect.not.objectContaining", () => {
* const expected = { foo: "bar" };
* expect({ bar: "baz" }).toEqual(expect.not.objectContaining(expected));
* });
*
* Deno.test("expect.not.stringContaining", () => {
* const expected = "Hello world!";
* expect("How are you?").toEqual(expect.not.stringContaining(expected));
* });
*
* Deno.test("expect.not.stringMatching", () => {
* const expected = /Hello world!/;
* expect("How are you?").toEqual(expect.not.stringMatching(expected));
* });
* ```
*/
expect.not = {
arrayContaining: asymmetricMatchers.arrayNotContaining,
objectContaining: asymmetricMatchers.objectNotContaining,
stringContaining: asymmetricMatchers.stringNotContaining,
stringMatching: asymmetricMatchers.stringNotMatching,
};
/**
* `expect.addSnapshotSerializer` adds a module that formats application-specific data structures.
*
* For an individual test file, an added module precedes any modules from snapshotSerializers configuration,
* which precede the default snapshot serializers for built-in JavaScript types.
* The last module added is the first module tested.
*
* @example
* ```ts no-eval
* import { expect } from "@std/expect";
* import serializerAnsi from "npm:jest-snapshot-serializer-ansi";
*
* expect.addSnapshotSerializer(serializerAnsi);
* ```
*/
expect.addSnapshotSerializer = addSerializer as (
plugin: SnapshotPlugin,
) => void;