Awesome
Choo Test
Easy Choo testing for Choo v5, v6 and v7.
Install
$ npm install choo-test --save-dev
Usage
Here is an example using Mochify as the test runner:
var assert = require('assert');
var choo = require('choo');
var html = require('choo/html');
var test = require('choo-test');
function model(state, emitter) {
state.text = 'Test';
emitter.on('change', () => {
state.text = 'Changed';
emitter.emit('render');
});
}
function view(state, emit) {
return html`<button onclick=${function () {
emit('change');
}}>${state.text}</button>`;
}
describe('choo-app', function () {
var restore;
var app;
beforeEach(function () {
app = choo();
app.use(model);
app.route('/', view);
});
afterEach(function () {
restore();
});
it('changes the button text on click', function (done) {
restore = test.start(app);
test.fire('button', 'click');
test.onRender(function () {
assert.equal(test.$('button').innerText, 'Changed');
done();
});
});
});
How does it work?
This module is a collection of helper functions. Each of them can be used separately.
When you use the start
function to start your Choo app, it wraps and appends
the application to a div
tag in the document.body
. When calling the
returned restore
function, the DOM node is removed again.
The onRender
function creates a MutationObserver and invokes the given
callback if any change in the DOM tree happens.
Global window events are captured and unregistered when calling restore()
.
API
$(selector[, scope])
: Find a DOM element usingquerySelector
.scope
must be a DOM node to search and defaults todocument
.$$(selector[, scope])
: Find all DOM element usingquerySelectorAll
.scope
must be a DOM node to search and defaults todocument
.fire(selector, event[, args])
: Fire an event using bean.fire.onRender([nodeOrSelector, ]fn)
: Register a function to invoke after the next DOM mutation occurred. If only a function is given, the entiredocument
is observed. If no mutation occurs within 1500 ms, a timeout error is thrown.start(app)
: Creates adiv
tag and append it todocument.body
, then starts the given Choo app and attaches the returned tree to thediv
node. Returns arestore()
function which remove thediv
node from the body.
Testing XHR
Use the Sinon.js fake server for XHR testing. If you're
using the xhr library, you have to initialize the XMLHttpRequest
implementation like this:
sandbox = sinon.sandbox.create({
useFakeServer: true
});
sandbox.stub(xhr, 'XMLHttpRequest', sandbox.server.xhr);
License
MIT