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// Type definitions for QUnit v2.0.1 | |
// Project: http://qunitjs.com/ | |
// Definitions by: James Bracy <https://github.com/waratuman> | |
// Definitions: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped | |
interface Assert { | |
/** | |
* Instruct QUnit to wait for an asynchronous operation. | |
* | |
* The callback returned from `assert.async()` will throw an Error if it is | |
* invoked more than once (or more often than the accepted call count, if | |
* provided). | |
* | |
* This replaces functionality previously provided by `QUnit.stop()` and | |
* `QUnit.start()`. | |
* | |
* @param {number} [acceptCallCount=1] Number of expected callbacks before the test is done. | |
*/ | |
async(acceptCallCount?: number): () => void; | |
/** | |
* A deep recursive comparison, working on primitive types, arrays, objects, | |
* regular expressions, dates and functions. | |
* | |
* The `deepEqual()` assertion can be used just like `equal()` when comparing | |
* the value of objects, such that `{ key: value }` is equal to | |
* `{ key: value }`. For non-scalar values, identity will be disregarded by | |
* deepEqual. | |
* | |
* `notDeepEqual()` can be used to explicitly test deep, strict inequality. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparision value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
deepEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A non-strict comparison, roughly equivalent to JUnit's assertEquals. | |
* | |
* The `equal` assertion uses the simple comparison operator (`==`) to | |
* compare the actual and expected arguments. When they are equal, the | |
* assertion passes; otherwise, it fails. When it fails, both actual and | |
* expected values are displayed in the test result, in addition to a given | |
* message. | |
* | |
* `notEqual()` can be used to explicitly test inequality. | |
* | |
* `strictEqual()` can be used to test strict equality. | |
* | |
* @param actual Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
equal(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* Specify how many assertions are expected to run within a test. | |
* | |
* To ensure that an explicit number of assertions are run within any test, | |
* use `assert.expect( number )` to register an expected count. If the | |
* number of assertions run does not match the expected count, the test will | |
* fail. | |
* | |
* @param {number} amount Number of assertions in this test. | |
*/ | |
expect(amount: number): void; | |
/** | |
* An inverted deep recursive comparison, working on primitive types, | |
* arrays, objects, regular expressions, dates and functions. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
notDeepEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A non-strict comparison, checking for inequality. | |
* | |
* The `notEqual` assertion uses the simple inverted comparison operator | |
* (`!=`) to compare the actual and expected arguments. When they aren't | |
* equal, the assertion passes; otherwise, it fails. When it fails, both | |
* actual and expected values are displayed in the test result, in addition | |
* to a given message. | |
* | |
* `equal()` can be used to test equality. | |
* | |
* `notStrictEqual()` can be used to test strict inequality. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
notEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A boolean check, inverse of `ok()` and CommonJS's `assert.ok()`, and | |
* equivalent to JUnit's `assertFalse()`. Passes if the first argument is | |
* falsy. | |
* | |
* `notOk()` requires just one argument. If the argument evaluates to false, | |
* the assertion passes; otherwise, it fails. If a second message argument | |
* is provided, it will be displayed in place of the result. | |
* | |
* @param state Expression being tested | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
notOk(state: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A strict comparison of an object's own properties, checking for inequality. | |
* | |
* The `notPropEqual` assertion uses the strict inverted comparison operator | |
* (`!==`) to compare the actual and expected arguments as Objects regarding | |
* only their properties but not their constructors. | |
* | |
* When they aren't equal, the assertion passes; otherwise, it fails. When | |
* it fails, both actual and expected values are displayed in the test | |
* result, in addition to a given message. | |
* | |
* `equal()` can be used to test equality. | |
* | |
* `propEqual()` can be used to test strict equality of an Object properties. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
notPropEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A strict comparison, checking for inequality. | |
* | |
* The `notStrictEqual` assertion uses the strict inverted comparison | |
* operator (`!==`) to compare the actual and expected arguments. When they | |
* aren't equal, the assertion passes; otherwise, it fails. When it fails, | |
* both actual and expected values are displayed in the test result, in | |
* addition to a given message. | |
* | |
* `equal()` can be used to test equality. | |
* | |
* `strictEqual()` can be used to test strict equality. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
notStrictEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A boolean check, equivalent to CommonJS's assert.ok() and JUnit's | |
* assertTrue(). Passes if the first argument is truthy. | |
* | |
* The most basic assertion in QUnit, ok() requires just one argument. If | |
* the argument evaluates to true, the assertion passes; otherwise, it | |
* fails. If a second message argument is provided, it will be displayed in | |
* place of the result. | |
* | |
* @param state Expression being tested | |
* @param {string} message A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
ok(state: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* A strict type and value comparison of an object's own properties. | |
* | |
* The `propEqual()` assertion provides strictly (`===`) comparison of | |
* Object properties. Unlike `deepEqual()`, this assertion can be used to | |
* compare two objects made with different constructors and prototype. | |
* | |
* `strictEqual()` can be used to test strict equality. | |
* | |
* `notPropEqual()` can be used to explicitly test strict inequality of | |
* Object properties. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
propEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* Report the result of a custom assertion | |
* | |
* Some test suites may need to express an expectation that is not defined | |
* by any of QUnit's built-in assertions. This need may be met by | |
* encapsulating the expectation in a JavaScript function which returns a | |
* `Boolean` value representing the result; this value can then be passed | |
* into QUnit's `ok` assertion. | |
* | |
* A more readable solution would involve defining a custom assertion. If | |
* the expectation function invokes `pushResult`, QUnit will be notified of | |
* the result and report it accordingly. | |
* | |
* @param assertionResult The assertion result | |
*/ | |
pushResult(assertResult: { | |
result: boolean; | |
actual: any; | |
expected: any; | |
message: string; | |
}): void; | |
/** | |
* A strict type and value comparison. | |
* | |
* The `strictEqual()` assertion provides the most rigid comparison of type | |
* and value with the strict equality operator (`===`). | |
* | |
* `equal()` can be used to test non-strict equality. | |
* | |
* `notStrictEqual()` can be used to explicitly test strict inequality. | |
* | |
* @param actual Object or Expression being tested | |
* @param expected Known comparison value | |
* @param {string} [message] A short description of the assertion | |
*/ | |
strictEqual(actual: any, expected: any, message?: string): void; | |
/** | |
* Test if a callback throws an exception, and optionally compare the thrown | |
* error. | |
* | |
* When testing code that is expected to throw an exception based on a | |
* specific set of circumstances, use assert.throws() to catch the error | |
* object for testing and comparison. | |
* | |
* In very few environments, like Closure Compiler, throws is considered a | |
* reserved word and will cause an error. For that case, an alias is bundled | |
* called `raises`. It has the same signature and behaviour, just a | |
* different name. | |
*/ | |
throws(block: () => void, expected?: any, message?: any): void; | |
raises(block: () => void, expected?: any, message?: any): void; | |
} | |
interface Config { | |
altertitle: boolean; | |
autostart: boolean; | |
collapse: boolean; | |
current: any; | |
filter: string | RegExp | |
fixture: string; | |
hidepassed: boolean; | |
maxDepth: number; | |
module: string; | |
moduleId: string[]; | |
notrycatch: boolean; | |
noglobals: boolean; | |
seed: string; | |
reorder: boolean; | |
requireExpects: boolean; | |
testId: string[]; | |
testTimeout: number; | |
scrolltop: boolean; | |
urlConfig: { | |
id?: string; | |
label?: string; | |
tooltip?: string; | |
value?: string | string[] | { [key: string]: string } | |
}[]; | |
} | |
interface Hooks { | |
/** | |
* Runs after the last test. If additional tests are defined after the | |
* module's queue has emptied, it will not run this hook again. | |
*/ | |
after?: (assert: Assert) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs after each test. | |
*/ | |
afterEach?: (assert: Assert) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs before the first test. | |
*/ | |
before?: (assert: Assert) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs before each test. | |
*/ | |
beforeEach?: (assert: Assert) => void; | |
} | |
interface NestedHooks { | |
/** | |
* Runs after the last test. If additional tests are defined after the | |
* module's queue has emptied, it will not run this hook again. | |
*/ | |
after: (fn: (assert: Assert) => void) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs after each test. | |
*/ | |
afterEach: (fn: (assert: Assert) => void) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs before the first test. | |
*/ | |
before: (fn: (assert: Assert) => void) => void; | |
/** | |
* Runs before each test. | |
*/ | |
beforeEach: (fn: (assert: Assert) => void) => void; | |
} | |
declare module 'qunit' { | |
/** | |
* Namespace for QUnit assertions | |
* | |
* QUnit's built-in assertions are defined on the `QUnit.assert` object. An | |
* instance of this object is passed as the only argument to the `QUnit.test` | |
* function callback. | |
* | |
* This object has properties for each of QUnit's built-in assertion methods. | |
*/ | |
export var assert: Assert; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever the test suite begins. | |
* | |
* `QUnit.begin()` is called once before running any tests. | |
* | |
* @callback callback Callback to execute. | |
*/ | |
export function begin(callback: (details: { totalTests: number }) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Configuration for QUnit | |
* | |
* QUnit has a bunch of internal configuration defaults, some of which are | |
* useful to override. Check the description for each option for details. | |
*/ | |
export var config: Config | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever the test suite ends. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function done(callback: (details: { failed: number, passed: number, total: number, runtime: number }) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Advanced and extensible data dumping for JavaScript. | |
* | |
* This method does string serialization by parsing data structures and | |
* objects. It parses DOM elements to a string representation of their outer | |
* HTML. By default, nested structures will be displayed up to five levels | |
* deep. Anything beyond that is replaced by `[object Object]` and | |
* `[object Array]` placeholders. | |
* | |
* If you need more or less output, change the value of `QUnit.dump.maxDepth`, | |
* representing how deep the elements should be parsed. | |
* | |
* Note: This method used to be in QUnit.jsDump, which was changed to | |
* QUnit.dump. The old property will be removed in QUnit 3.0. | |
*/ | |
export var dump: { | |
maxDepth: number; | |
parse(data: any): string | |
}; | |
/** | |
* Copy the properties defined by the `mixin` object into the `target` object. | |
* | |
* This method will modify the `target` object to contain the "own" properties | |
* defined by the `mixin`. If the `mixin` object specifies the value of any | |
* attribute as undefined, this property will instead be removed from the | |
* `target` object. | |
* | |
* @param target An object whose properties are to be modified | |
* @param mixin An object describing which properties should be modified | |
*/ | |
export function extend(target: any, mixin: any): void; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever an assertion completes. | |
* | |
* This is one of several callbacks QUnit provides. Its intended for | |
* integration scenarios like PhantomJS or Jenkins. The properties of the | |
* details argument are listed below as options. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function log(callback: (details: { | |
result: boolean, | |
actual: any; | |
expected: any; | |
message: string; | |
source: string; | |
module: string; | |
name: string; | |
runtime: number; | |
}) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Group related tests under a single label. | |
* | |
* You can use the module name to organize, select, and filter tests to run. | |
* | |
* All tests inside a module callback function will be grouped into that | |
* module. The test names will all be preceded by the module name in the | |
* test results. Other modules can be nested inside this callback function, | |
* where their tests' names will be labeled by their names recursively | |
* prefixed by their parent modules. | |
* | |
* If `QUnit.module` is defined without a `nested` callback argument, all | |
* subsequently defined tests will be grouped into the module until another | |
* module is defined. | |
* | |
* Modules with test group functions allow you to define nested modules, and | |
* QUnit will run tests on the parent module before going deep on the nested | |
* ones, even if they're declared first. Additionally, any hook callbacks on | |
* a parent module will wrap the hooks on a nested module. In other words, | |
* `before` and `beforeEach` callbacks will form a queue while the | |
* `afterEach` and `after` callbacks will form a stack. | |
* | |
* You can specify code to run before and after tests using the hooks | |
* argument, and also to create properties that will be shared on the | |
* testing context. Any additional properties on the `hooks` object will be | |
* added to that context. The `hooks` argument is still optional if you call | |
* `QUnit.module` with a callback argument. | |
* | |
* The module's callback is invoked with the test environment as its `this` | |
* context, with the environment's properties copied to the module's tests, | |
* hooks, and nested modules. Note that changes on tests' `this` are not | |
* preserved between sibling tests, where `this` will be reset to the initial | |
* value for each test. | |
* | |
* @param {string} name Label for this group of tests | |
* @param hookds Callbacks to run during test execution | |
* @param nested A callback with grouped tests and nested modules to run under the current module label | |
*/ | |
export function module(name: string, hooks?: Hooks, nested?: (hooks: NestedHooks) => void): void; | |
export function module(name: string, nested?: (hooks: NestedHooks) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever a module ends. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function moduleDone(callback: (details: { | |
name: string; | |
failed: number; | |
passed: number; | |
total: number; | |
runtime: number; | |
}) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever a module begins. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function moduleStart(callback: (details: { name: string }) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Adds a test to exclusively run, preventing all other tests from running. | |
* | |
* Use this method to focus your test suite on a specific test. QUnit.only | |
* will cause any other tests in your suite to be ignored. | |
* | |
* Note, that if more than one QUnit.only is present only the first instance | |
* will run. | |
* | |
* This is an alternative to filtering tests to run in the HTML reporter. It | |
* is especially useful when you use a console reporter or in a codebase | |
* with a large set of long running tests. | |
* | |
* @param {string} name Title of unit being tested | |
* @param callback Function to close over assertions | |
*/ | |
export function only(name: string, callback: (assert: Assert) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* DEPRECATED: Report the result of a custom assertion. | |
* | |
* This method is deprecated and it's recommended to use pushResult on its | |
* direct reference in the assertion context. | |
* | |
* QUnit.push reflects to the current running test, and it may leak | |
* assertions in asynchronous mode. Checkout assert.pushResult() to set a | |
* proper custom assertion. | |
* | |
* Invoking QUnit.push allows to create a readable expectation that is not | |
* defined by any of QUnit's built-in assertions. | |
* | |
* @deprecated | |
*/ | |
export function push(result: boolean, actual: any, expected: any, message: string): void; | |
/** | |
* Adds a test like object to be skipped. | |
* | |
* Use this method to replace QUnit.test() instead of commenting out entire | |
* tests. | |
* | |
* This test's prototype will be listed on the suite as a skipped test, | |
* ignoring the callback argument and the respective global and module's | |
* hooks. | |
* | |
* @param {string} Title of unit being tested | |
*/ | |
export function skip(name: string, callback?: (assert: Assert) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Returns a single line string representing the stacktrace (call stack). | |
* | |
* This method returns a single line string representing the stacktrace from | |
* where it was called. According to its offset argument, `QUnit.stack()` will | |
* return the correspondent line from the call stack. | |
* | |
* The default `offset` is `0` and will return the current location where it | |
* was called. | |
* | |
* Not all browsers support retrieving stracktraces. In those, `QUnit.stack()` | |
* will return undefined. | |
* | |
* @param {number} offset Set the stacktrace line offset. | |
*/ | |
export function stack(offset?: number): string; | |
/** | |
* `QUnit.start()` must be used to start a test run that has | |
* `QUnit.config.autostart` set to `false`. | |
* | |
* This method was previously used to control async tests on text contexts | |
* along with QUnit.stop. For asynchronous tests, use assert.async instead. | |
* | |
* When your async test has multiple exit points, call `QUnit.start()` for the | |
* corresponding number of `QUnit.stop()` increments. | |
*/ | |
export function start(): void; | |
/** | |
* Add a test to run. | |
* | |
* Add a test to run using `QUnit.test()`. | |
* | |
* The `assert` argument to the callback contains all of QUnit's assertion | |
* methods. Use this argument to call your test assertions. | |
* | |
* `QUnit.test()` can automatically handle the asynchronous resolution of a | |
* Promise on your behalf if you return a thenable Promise as the result of | |
* your callback function. | |
* | |
* @param {string} Title of unit being tested | |
* @param callback Function to close over assertions | |
*/ | |
export function test(name: string, callback: (assert: Assert) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever a test ends. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function testDone(callback: (details: { | |
name: string; | |
module: string; | |
failed: number; | |
passed: number; | |
total: number; | |
runtime: number; | |
}) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Register a callback to fire whenever a test begins. | |
* | |
* @param callback Callback to execute | |
*/ | |
export function testStart(callback: (details: { name: string; module: string;}) => void): void; | |
/** | |
* Are the test running from the server or not. | |
*/ | |
export var isLocal: boolean; | |
/** | |
* QUnit version | |
*/ | |
export var version: string; | |
} |
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FYI - I had to edit the original to make this work with 'browser-based-qunit' as opposed to 'node-based-qunit'