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twbs--bootstrap/js/tests
Mark Otto c01fa6b369 Merge pull request #17536 from Johann-S/testPadding
[Fix #17400] Add tests about padding restoration
2016-10-28 13:46:14 -07:00
..
unit Merge pull request #17536 from Johann-S/testPadding 2016-10-28 13:46:14 -07:00
vendor Update dependencies, including Babel to v6 and zeroUnits fix. 2016-10-09 12:15:17 +11:00
visual Use a single class name for opened/expanded/shown state of widgets 2016-10-25 14:07:41 +02:00
index.html js/tests/index.html: Replace jQuery event alias methods with functions that throw explanatory errors, instead of with undefined 2016-02-16 04:05:41 -08:00
README.md Fix broken/redirected links, moving to HTTPS where possible. (#20557) 2016-10-03 09:55:59 -07:00

How does Bootstrap's test suite work?

Bootstrap uses QUnit, a powerful, easy-to-use JavaScript unit test framework. Each plugin has a file dedicated to its tests in unit/<plugin-name>.js.

  • unit/ contains the unit test files for each Bootstrap plugin.
  • vendor/ contains third-party testing-related code (QUnit and jQuery).
  • visual/ contains "visual" tests which are run interactively in real browsers and require manual verification by humans.

To run the unit test suite via PhantomJS, run grunt test-js.

To run the unit test suite via a real web browser, open index.html in the browser.

How do I add a new unit test?

  1. Locate and open the file dedicated to the plugin which you need to add tests to (unit/<plugin-name>.js).
  2. Review the QUnit API Documentation and use the existing tests as references for how to structure your new tests.
  3. Write the necessary unit test(s) for the new or revised functionality.
  4. Run grunt test-js to see the results of your newly-added test(s).

Note: Your new unit tests should fail before your changes are applied to the plugin, and should pass after your changes are applied to the plugin.

What should a unit test look like?

  • Each test should have a unique name clearly stating what unit is being tested.
  • Each test should test only one unit per test, although one test can include several assertions. Create multiple tests for multiple units of functionality.
  • Each test should begin with assert.expect to ensure that the expected assertions are run.
  • Each test should follow the project's JavaScript Code Guidelines

Example tests

// Synchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
  assert.expect(1)
  var templateHTML = '<div class="alert alert-danger fade in">'
      + '<a class="close" href="#" data-dismiss="alert">×</a>'
      + '<p><strong>Template necessary for the test.</p>'
      + '</div>'
  var $alert = $(templateHTML).appendTo('#qunit-fixture').bootstrapAlert()

  $alert.find('.close').click()

  // Make assertion
  assert.strictEqual($alert.hasClass('in'), false, 'remove .in class on .close click')
})

// Asynchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
  assert.expect(1)
  var done = assert.async()

  $('<div title="tooltip title"></div>')
    .appendTo('#qunit-fixture')
    .on('shown.bs.tooltip', function () {
      assert.ok(true, '"shown" event was fired after calling "show"')
      done()
    })
    .bootstrapTooltip('show')
})