Assertions
To help developers write tests the Deno standard library comes with a built in assertions module which can be imported from https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/testing/asserts.ts
.
import { assert } from "https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/testing/asserts.ts";
Deno.test("Hello Test", () => {
assert("Hello");
});
The assertions module provides 10 assertions:
assert(expr: unknown, msg = ""): asserts expr
assertEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void
assertExists(actual: unknown,msg?: string): void
assertNotEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void
assertStrictEquals(actual: unknown, expected: unknown, msg?: string): void
assertStringIncludes(actual: string, expected: string, msg?: string): void
assertArrayIncludes(actual: unknown[], expected: unknown[], msg?: string): void
assertMatch(actual: string, expected: RegExp, msg?: string): void
assertNotMatch(actual: string, expected: RegExp, msg?: string): void
assertObjectMatch( actual: Record<PropertyKey, unknown>, expected: Record<PropertyKey, unknown>): void
assertThrows(fn: () => void, ErrorClass?: Constructor, msgIncludes = "", msg?: string): Error
assertThrowsAsync(fn: () => Promise<void>, ErrorClass?: Constructor, msgIncludes = "", msg?: string): Promise<Error>
Assert
The assert method is a simple ‘truthy’ assertion and can be used to assert any value which can be inferred as true.
Deno.test("Test Assert", () => {
assert(1);
assert("Hello");
assert(true);
});
Exists
The assertExists
can be used to check if a value is not null
or undefined
.
assertExists("Denosaurus");
Deno.test("Test Assert Exists", () => {
assertExists("Denosaurus");
assertExists(false);
assertExists(0);
});
Equality
There are three equality assertions available, assertEquals()
, assertNotEquals()
and assertStrictEquals()
.
The assertEquals()
and assertNotEquals()
methods provide a general equality check and are capable of asserting equality between primitive types and objects.
Deno.test("Test Assert Equals", () => {
assertEquals(1, 1);
assertEquals("Hello", "Hello");
assertEquals(true, true);
assertEquals(undefined, undefined);
assertEquals(null, null);
assertEquals(new Date(), new Date());
assertEquals(new RegExp("abc"), new RegExp("abc"));
class Foo {}
const foo1 = new Foo();
const foo2 = new Foo();
assertEquals(foo1, foo2);
});
Deno.test("Test Assert Not Equals", () => {
assertNotEquals(1, 2);
assertNotEquals("Hello", "World");
assertNotEquals(true, false);
assertNotEquals(undefined, "");
assertNotEquals(new Date(), Date.now());
assertNotEquals(new RegExp("abc"), new RegExp("def"));
});
By contrast assertStrictEquals()
provides a simpler, stricter equality check based on the ===
operator. As a result it will not assert two instances of identical objects as they won’t be referentially the same.
Deno.test("Test Assert Strict Equals", () => {
assertStrictEquals(1, 1);
assertStrictEquals("Hello", "Hello");
assertStrictEquals(true, true);
assertStrictEquals(undefined, undefined);
});
The assertStrictEquals()
assertion is best used when you wish to make a precise check against two primitive types.
Contains
There are two methods available to assert a value contains a value, assertStringIncludes()
and assertArrayIncludes()
.
The assertStringIncludes()
assertion does a simple includes check on a string to see if it contains the expected string.
Deno.test("Test Assert String Contains", () => {
assertStringIncludes("Hello World", "Hello");
});
The assertArrayIncludes()
assertion is slightly more advanced and can find both a value within an array and an array of values within an array.
Deno.test("Test Assert Array Contains", () => {
assertArrayIncludes([1, 2, 3], [1]);
assertArrayIncludes([1, 2, 3], [1, 2]);
assertArrayIncludes(Array.from("Hello World"), Array.from("Hello"));
});
Regex
You can assert regular expressions via assertMatch()
and assertNotMatch()
assertions.
Deno.test("Test Assert Match", () => {
assertMatch("abcdefghi", new RegExp("def"));
const basicUrl = new RegExp("^https?://[a-z.]+.com$");
assertMatch("https://www.google.com", basicUrl);
assertMatch("http://facebook.com", basicUrl);
});
Deno.test("Test Assert Not Match", () => {
assertNotMatch("abcdefghi", new RegExp("jkl"));
const basicUrl = new RegExp("^https?://[a-z.]+.com$");
assertNotMatch("https://deno.land/", basicUrl);
});
Object
Use assertObjectMatch
to check that a JavaScript object matches a subset of the properties of an object.
// Simple subset
assertObjectMatch(
{ foo: true, bar: false },
{
foo: true,
},
);
Throws
There are two ways to assert whether something throws an error in Deno, assertThrows()
and assertThrowsAsync()
. Both assertions allow you to check an Error has been thrown, the type of error thrown and what the message was.
The difference between the two assertions is assertThrows()
accepts a standard function and assertThrowsAsync()
accepts a function which returns a Promise.
The assertThrows()
assertion will check an error has been thrown, and optionally will check the thrown error is of the correct type, and assert the error message is as expected.
Deno.test("Test Assert Throws", () => {
assertThrows(
() => {
throw new Error("Panic!");
},
Error,
"Panic!",
);
});
The assertThrowsAsync()
assertion is a little more complicated, mainly because it deals with Promises. But basically it will catch thrown errors or rejections in Promises. You can also optionally check for the error type and error message.
Deno.test("Test Assert Throws Async", () => {
assertThrowsAsync(
() => {
return new Promise(() => {
throw new Error("Panic! Threw Error");
});
},
Error,
"Panic! Threw Error",
);
assertThrowsAsync(
() => {
return Promise.reject(new Error("Panic! Reject Error"));
},
Error,
"Panic! Reject Error",
);
});
Custom Messages
Each of Deno’s built in assertions allow you to overwrite the standard CLI error message if you wish. For instance this example will output “Values Don’t Match!” rather than the standard CLI error message.
Deno.test("Test Assert Equal Fail Custom Message", () => {
assertEquals(1, 2, "Values Don't Match!");
});
Custom Tests
While Deno comes with powerful assertions modules but there is always something specific to the project you can add. Creating custom assertion function
can improve readability and reduce the amount of code.
function assertPowerOf(actual: number, expected: number, msg?: string): void {
let received = actual;
while (received % expected === 0) received = received / expected;
if (received !== 1) {
if (!msg) {
msg = `actual: "${actual}" expected to be a power of : "${expected}"`;
}
throw new AssertionError(msg);
}
}
Use this matcher in your code like this:
Deno.test("Test Assert PowerOf", () => {
assertPowerOf(8, 2);
assertPowerOf(11, 4);
});