jasmine-sinon
v0.4.0
Published
Jasmine BDD matchers for Sinon.JS
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Jasmine matchers for Sinon.JS
jasmine-sinon provides a set of custom matchers for using the Sinon.JS spying, stubbing and mocking library with Jasmine BDD.
Instead of:
expect(mySinonSpy.calledWith('foo')).toBeTruthy();
you can say:
expect(mySinonSpy).toHaveBeenCalledWith('foo');
This is not only nicerer to look at in your purdy specs, but you get more descriptive failure output in your Jasmine spec runner.
Instead of:
Expected false to be truthy.
you get:
Expected spy "mySpy" to have been called with "foo".
Jasmine 1.x / 2.x compatibility
If you are using Jasmine 1.x, use the latest 0.3.x release. For Jasmine 2, use 0.4 or above.
Installation
Direct include
Just include lib/jasmine-sinon.js in your Jasmine test runner file. Don't forget to include sinon.js.
With jasmine-gem
Add it to jasmine.yml. Don't forget to include sinon.js.
Node.js / NPM
npm install jasmine-sinon --save-dev
Then, in your jasmine spec:
var sinon = require('sinon');
require('jasmine-sinon');
Using Bower
bower install jasmine-sinon --save-dev
Then, include components/jasmine-sinon/index.js
in your test runner.
Sinon.JS matchers
In general, you should be able to translate a Sinon spy/stub/mock API method to a jasmine-sinon matcher by prepending toHaveBeen to the front of the method name. For example, the Sinon.JS spy method called becomes toHaveBeenCalled. There are one or two exceptions to this rule, so the full list of matchers is given below.
These matchers will work on spies, individual spy calls, stubs and mocks.
You can use Jasmine spies alongside your Sinon spies. jasmine-sinon will detect which you're using and use the appropriate matcher.
You can also use Jasmine's fuzzy matchers any()
and objectContaining()
in expectations, e.g.
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalledWith(jasmine.any(Date));
expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalledWith(jasmine.objectContaining({name: 'froots'}))
Contributors
Thanks to:
- @aelesbao for Exception matchers
- @theinterned for, er, match matchers
- @milichev for graceful spy matchers
- @reinseth for Jasmine fuzzy matcher support
- @stoodder for initial Jasmine 2.0 support work