@mindhive/some

4.1.2 • Public • Published

Some

Elegant language for test data

The code in each spec / test should be about conveying as elegantly as possibly what the test is trying to prove. But what to do when you need to pass a value in a test but that value has no meaning.

For example:

const expected = true;
const actual = returnParam(expected);
actual.should.equal(expected);

Someone reading the test could ask "Is the value true important? Does returnParam only work with the value true? Do non-boolean values work as well?". We could add more tests to answer these questions but then the meaning of this test would be lost amongst the noise of repetition.

This is where some comes in:

const expected = some.bool();
const actual = returnParam(expected);
actual.should.equal(expected);

Now we make plain that the value itself is not important, and that we are explicitly testing booleans. This is also more rigorous than passing a fixed value because over multiple test runs both true and false will be tested.

bool() is just one of many functions in this package for producing test values. See index.ts for the complete list.

Unique namespace

Sometimes you want values that aren't important, but are unique from each other. For that there are various functions in the unique namespace.

For example:

const obj = {};
obj[some.unique.string()] = some.primitive();
obj[some.unique.string()] = some.primitive();
Object.keys(obj).should.have.length(2);

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4.1.2

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Collaborators

  • damonmaria
  • nickvirtue