The old style of merging all of a function's variable declarations into
a single statement made some sense back in the days of var, but there's
no reason to keep doing it now that we use const and let.
This will allow us to add support for custom object formatters, which
will be a per-runable resource like custom matchers, by injecting them
into the pretty-printer.
By deferring the evaluation of these messages, we can avoid the
expensive creation of them when in the majority use case (tests are
passing) they are not needed.
These failure messages were causing performance problems with larger
objects needed to be pretty printed as discussed in #520 and brought up
by @rdy.
[fixes#65925900][fixes#520]
- Will replace rake core_specs.
- Remove obsolete dependencies & files -- most of these were for build tasks we
are no longer using. Notably, rspec and spec_helper were deleted.
Jasmine spies now have a 'and' property which allows the user to
change the spy's execution strategy-- such as '.and.callReturn(4)'
and a 'calls' property which allows inspection of the calls a spy
has received.
* This is a breaking change *
There is a CallTracker that keeps track of all calls and arguments
and a SpyStrategy which determines what the spy should do when it
is called.
- included what was thrown for failure messages in toThrow and toThrowError
- fixed typo from 'execption' to 'exception' in toThrowError failure messages
- clarified failure messages in toThrowError to include specific error types
[Fixes#52680709]
- It still supports no expected, which means that something was thrown
- Expected value is now tested via equality in order to pass
Adding toThrowError:
- toThrowError() passes if an Error type was thrown
- toThrowError(String) & toThrowError(RegExp) compare Expected to the Error message
- toThrowError(Error constructor) compares Expected to the constructor of what was thrown
- toThrowError(Error constructor, String) & toThrowError(Error constructor, RegExp) compares both the Error and the message
Also, equality now handles Errors, enforcing the message as part of the equality.