jquery.expect

0.2.0 • Public • Published

$expect Build Status

A DOM assertion library built on top of jQuery and based on LearnBoost's expect.js

Running tests

git clone https://github.com/Codecademy/jquery-expect.git
cd jquery-expect
npm install

Running in phantom.js

make test

Running in browser

make test-browser

Navigate your browser to http://localhost:8080/test

API

For all API methods the last argument passed will override the default assertion error message.

exist

Check the existence by asserting that there is at least one element in the jQuery collection.

$expect('div').to.exist();
$expect('div').to.exist('Please add a div to the page!');
 

Error message

As mentioned above, $expect ships with default error messages for each of the assertion API
available. But also gives the user the ability to override these error messages.

The argument following the last formal argument of any assertion method would be considered
as the error message overriding argument.

You could either pass in a simple string or a function that should return a string to override
the default message.

The passed in function could act as a cleanup function before throwing the assertion error.
It would be passed a boolean stating whether the assertion would throw or not.

$expect('div').to.exist(function (willThrow) {
  // Some cleanup code.
  return 'Please add a div to the page.'
});

items / elements / length

Asserts the .length property.

$expect('ol > li').to.have.items(4);

above / greaterThan

Asserts that the .length property is greater than a given number.

$expect('li').to.be.above(4);

below / lessThan

Asserts that the .length property is less than a given number.

$expect('li').to.be.lessThan(5);

be / a / an

Asserts that each element in a jQuery collection matches the passed in selector.

$expect('div').to.be('.widget');
$expect('input').to.be('[type=text]');
$expect('.win').to.be.a('div');
$expect('.list').to.be.an('ol');

Internally calls $().is so it can be passed either a selector, a function, a jQuery object, or an element.
For more info check out the jQuery docs.

$expect('h1').to.be($headers);

eql / equal

Asserts that one jQuery collection has the exact same elements as another.
Can accept a jQuery collection or simply a selector

$expect('li.first').to.be.equal('li:first');
$expect('div').to.be.equal($('.all-the-divs'));

attr

Asserts the existence of an attribute and its equality if a value was passed in.

$expect('.container').to.have.attr('id', 'content');
$expect('.some-input').to.have.attr('value');

text

Asserts that an element has the exact same text.
If a number is passed in then the length of the text would be checked.
If a RegExp is passed in then it will be matched against the text.

$expect('.link-1').to.have.text(10);
$expect('.link-1').to.have.text(/code/i);
$expect('.link-1').to.have.text('Codecademy');
$expect('.link-2').to.have.text('Google', 'Why not?');

match

Asserts that the visible text of an element matches the given RegExp. An alias for .text(RegExp).

$expect('.link-1').to.match(/code/i);

contain

Asserts that an element contains a certain text.
By default punctuation, whitespace, and case would be ignored. Pass in a second true argument to ensure a strict check.

$expect('body').to.contain('author');
$expect('.links').to.contain('people');
$expect('.content').to.contain('Amjad', 'My name must exist and be capitalized');

Dimension check

Asserts the width, innerWidth, outerWidth, height, innerHeight,
outerHeight, scrollTop, and scrollTop of an element.
Can either pass in a number or a string with the operation prepended to it.

$expect('.nav').to.have.width(250);
$expect('.header').to.have.innerWidth('>= 50')
              .and.to.have.innerWidth('<= 250');

value / val

Asserts that an input element has a certain value. Calls $().val.

$expect('input.password').to.have.val('PlainText');

html

Asserts that an element has an html string. Calls $().html.

$expect('body').to.have.html('<div>foo</div>');

htmlMatch

Asserts that the html content of an element matches the given RegExp.

$expect('body').to.matchHtml(/<body><h1>Content/);

Traversing

Asserts the existence of element in different directions of the DOM tree.
Relies on jQuery's traversal methods.

$expect('body').to.have.children('.foos');
$expect('#so-lonely').to.have.siblings('.party-elements');

$().find is aliased to $().have

$expect('body').to.have('input');

any

Asserts that any element of a collection passes the given expectation callback.

$expect('ul').to.have.children('li').that.any(function(li) {
  $expect(li).to.have.text('List Item Content');
})

class

Asserts the existence of a class or multiple space separated classes on each element of a collection.

$expect('input[type=text]').to.have.class('on field');

Shorthand attributes

Convenience methods for checking the following attributes and selectors:
visible, hidden, selected, checked, disabled, empty.

$expect('h2').to.be.hidden();
$expect('input.submit').not.to.be.hidden('Please hide the submit button for now!');
$expect('body').not.to.be.empty();

Chaining

You can chain assertions on an object just like you can chain methods in jQuery.

And

Chains assertions on the original object.

$expect('div.container').to.exist().and.not.be.empty().and.to.have.width('>= 250');

that / which

Chains assertions on different elements after calling any of the traversal methods.

$expect('ul.todos').to.exist()
               .and.to.have.children('li.items').that.has.css('border', '1px solid red');
                .and.has.attr('data-id');

When chaining on traveresed elements just as in jQuery you can always call .end to get
the original object back.

$expect('div.container').to.have.siblings('.pane').that.has.css('float', 'left')
                   end().to.be('.loading');

License

MIT License. Copyright (c) 2012 Amjad Masad <amjad@codecademy.com> Ryzac, Inc.

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npm i jquery.expect

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Version

0.2.0

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Collaborators

  • codecademy
  • amasad