Jasmine (JavaScript framework)
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Jasmine is an
open-source Open source is source code that is made freely available for possible modification and redistribution. Products include permission to use the source code, design documents, or content of the product. The open-source model is a decentralized so ...
testing framework for
JavaScript JavaScript (), often abbreviated as JS, is a programming language that is one of the core technologies of the World Wide Web, alongside HTML and CSS. As of 2022, 98% of websites use JavaScript on the client side for webpage behavior, of ...
. It aims to run on any JavaScript-enabled platform, to not intrude on the application nor the IDE, and to have easy-to-read syntax. It is heavily influenced by other unit testing frameworks, such as ScrewUnit, JSSpec, JSpec, and
RSpec RSpec is a computer domain-specific language (DSL) (particular application domain) testing tool written in the programming language Ruby to test Ruby code. It is a behavior-driven development (BDD) framework which is extensively used in productio ...
.


History

The developers at Pivotal Labs for Jasmine previously developed a similar unit testing framework called JsUnit before active development of Jasmine.GitHub JsUnit Project Page
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Features

* Supports asynchronous testing. * Makes use of 'spies' for implementing test doubles. * Supports testing of front-end code through a front-end extension of Jasmine called Jasmine-jQuery.


Usage

Jasmine aims to be easy to read. A simple hello world test looks like the code below, where describe() describes a suite of tests and it() is an individual test specification. The name "it()" follows the idea of
behavior-driven development In software engineering, behavior-driven development (BDD) is an agile software development process that encourages collaboration among developers, quality assurance experts, and customer representatives in a software project. It encourages teams ...
and serves as the first word in the test name, which should be a complete sentence. Usage follows syntax similar to that of
RSpec RSpec is a computer domain-specific language (DSL) (particular application domain) testing tool written in the programming language Ruby to test Ruby code. It is a behavior-driven development (BDD) framework which is extensively used in productio ...
. The code below tests this function function helloWorld() and verifies that its output is indeed the text "Hello world!". describe('Hello world', function() ); Jasmine provides a rich set of built-in matchers. In the above example, toEqual checks the equality between the value returned from the helloWorld() function and the 'Hello world!' string. This is the same as assertions used in other testing frameworks. Jasmine matchers return a Boolean value: true if the expectation is matched (a way to indicate that the test has passed) or false if the expectation does not match. A good practice is to put a single expectation in an individual it() test specification. Other built-in matchers include toBe, toBeTruthy, toBeFalsy, toContain, toBeDefined, toBeUndefined, toBeNull, toBeNaN, toBeGreaterThan, toBeLessThan, toBeCloseTo. The identity matcher toBe checks if two things are the same object. The condition matchers toBeTruthy, toBeFalsy evaluate if something is true or false and toBeDefined, toBeUndefined check if something is defined or undefined. As the name suggests toBeNull checks if something is null and toBeNaN checks if something is not a number ( NaN). Precision matcher toBeCloseTo accepts two parameters and checks if a number is close to the first parameter, given a certain amount of decimal precision as indicated by the second parameter. Matcher toContain is used to verify that an element, object or sub-string is contained in an array, list or string. The special built-in matcher toThrow is used to verify that an exception has been thrown. The code below verifies that "Some exception" is thrown. describe('Expect to throw an exception', function() ); Jasmine has a number of other features, such as custom matchers, spies, and support for asynchronous specifications.


Jasmine test runners

Jasmine comes with an inbuilt test runner. Jasmine tests can run browser tests by including a simple SpecRunner.html file or by using it as a command line test runner supported for various languages lik
Nodejs, Python, Ruby
or (old way) by using Karma, a simple JavaScript test runner tool.


Comparison between Jasmine and Mocha

Mocha is another popular Javascript testing framework. The comparison between Jasmine and Mocha is given in the table below.


Benefits

* The aim of Jasmine is to be browser, framework, platform and language independent. * Besides behavior-driven development, Jasmine also supports test driven development.


See also

* List of JavaScript libraries * List of unit testing frameworks *
Mocha (JavaScript framework) Mocha is a JavaScript test framework for Node.js programs, featuring browser support, asynchronous testing, test coverage reports, and use of any assertion library. Assertion Libraries Mocha can be used with most JavaScript assertion librarie ...
* QUnit * JavaScript framework * JavaScript library


References

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External links


Jasmine website

Jasmine on GitHub

JSSpec

JSpec

ScrewUnit
JavaScript programming tools Unit testing frameworks Software using the MIT license Free software programmed in JavaScript