should is an expressive, readable, framework-agnostic assertion library. The main goals of this library are to be expressive and to be helpful. It keeps your test code clean, and your error messages helpful.
By default (when you require('should')
) should extends the Object.prototype
with a single non-enumerable getter that allows you to express how that object should behave. It also returns itself when required with require
.
It is also possible to use should.js without getter (it will not even try to exetend Object.prototype), just require('should/as-function')
. Or if you already use version that auto add getter, you can call .noConflict
function.
Results of (something).should
getter and should(something)
in most situations the same
Please check wiki page for upgrading instructions.
You can take look in FAQ.
var should = require('should');
var user = {
name: 'tj'
, pets: ['tobi', 'loki', 'jane', 'bandit']
};
user.should.have.property('name', 'tj');
user.should.have.property('pets').with.lengthOf(4);
// If the object was created with Object.create(null)
// then it doesn't inherit `Object.prototype`, so it will not have `.should` getter
// so you can do:
should(user).have.property('name', 'tj');
// also you can test in that way for null's
should(null).not.be.ok();
someAsyncTask(foo, function(err, result){
should.not.exist(err);
should.exist(result);
result.bar.should.equal(foo);
});
-
Install it:
$ npm install should --save-dev
-
Require it and use:
var should = require('should'); (5).should.be.exactly(5).and.be.a.Number();
var should = require('should/as-function'); should(10).be.exactly(5).and.be.a.Number();
Well, even when browsers by complains of authors has 100% es5 support, it does not mean it has no bugs. Please see wiki for known bugs.
If you want to use should in browser, use the should.js
file in the root of this repository, or build it yourself. To build a fresh version:
$ npm install
$ gulp script
The script is exported to window.Should
. It is the same as using should
statically:
Should(5).be.exactly(5)
Also, in the case of node.js, Object.prototype
is extended with should
(hence the capital S in window.Should
):
window.should.be.exactly(window);
// the same
// window is host object
should.be.exactly(window);
// you should not really care about it
(5).should.be.exactly(5);
You can easy install it with npm or bower:
npm install should --save-dev
# or
bower install shouldjs/should.js
Actual api docs generated by jsdoc comments and available at http://shouldjs.github.io.
Please look on usage in examples
.not
negates the current assertion.
.any
allow for assertions with multiple parameters to assert any of the parameters (but not all). This is similar to the native JavaScript array.some.
Every assertion will return a should.js
-wrapped Object, so assertions can be chained.
To help chained assertions read more clearly, you can use the following helpers anywhere in your chain: .an
, .of
, .a
, .and
, .be
, .have
, .with
, .is
, .which
. Use them for better readability; they do nothing at all.
For example:
user.should.be.an.instanceOf(Object).and.have.property('name', 'tj');
user.pets.should.be.instanceof(Array).and.have.lengthOf(4);
Almost all assertions return the same object - so you can easy chain them. But some (eg: .length
and .property
) move the assertion object to a property value, so be careful.
Adding own assertion is pretty easy. You need to call should.Assertion.add
function. It accept 2 arguments:
- name of assertion method (string)
- assertion function (function)
What assertion function should do. It should check only positive case. should
will handle .not
itself.
this
in assertion function will be instance of should.Assertion
and you must define in any way this.params object
in your assertion function call before assertion check happen.
params
object can contain several fields:
operator
- it is string which describe your assertionactual
it is actual value, you can assume it is your own this.obj if you need to define you ownexpected
it is any value that expected to be matched this.obj
You can assume its usage in generating AssertionError message like: expected obj
? || this.obj not? operator
expected
?
In should
sources appeared 2 kinds of usage of this method.
First not preferred and used only for shortcuts to other assertions, e.g how .should.be.true()
defined:
Assertion.add('true', function() {
this.is.exactly(true);
});
There you can see that assertion function do not define own this.params
and instead call within the same assertion .exactly
that will fill this.params
. You should use this way very carefully, but you can use it.
Second way preferred and i assume you will use it instead of first.
Assertion.add('true', function() {
this.params = { operator: 'to be true', expected: true };
should(this.obj).be.exactly(true);
});
in this case this.params defined and then used new assertion context (because called .should
). Internally this way does not
create any edge cases as first.
Assertion.add('asset', function() {
this.params = { operator: 'to be asset' };
this.obj.should.have.property('id').which.is.a.Number();
this.obj.should.have.property('path');
})
//then
> ({ id: '10' }).should.be.an.asset();
AssertionError: expected { id: '10' } to be asset
expected '10' to be a number
> ({ id: 10 }).should.be.an.asset();
AssertionError: expected { id: 10 } to be asset
expected { id: 10 } to have property path
Actual list of contributors if you want to show it your friends.
To run the tests for should simply run:
$ npm test
See also CONTRIBUTING.
Yes, yes it does, with a single getter should, and no it won't break your code, because it does this properly with a non-enumerable property.
Also it is possible use it without extension.
MIT © 2010-2014 TJ Holowaychuk