# should.js [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/shouldjs/should.js](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/shouldjs/should.js) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/shouldjs/should.js.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/shouldjs/should.js) [![Selenium Test Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/shouldjs.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/shouldjs) _should_ is an expressive, readable, framework-agnostic assertion library. The main goals of this library are __to be expressive__ and __to be helpful__. It keeps your test code clean, and your error messages helpful. By default (when you `require('should')`) _should_ extends the `Object.prototype` with a single non-enumerable getter that allows you to express how that object should behave. It also returns itself when required with `require`. It is also possible to use should.js without getter (it will not even try to extend Object.prototype), just `require('should/as-function')`. Or if you already use version that auto add getter, you can call `.noConflict` function. **Results of `(something).should` getter and `should(something)` in most situations are the same** ### Upgrading instructions Please check [wiki page](https://github.com/shouldjs/should.js/wiki/Breaking-changes) for upgrading instructions. ### FAQ You can take look in [FAQ](https://github.com/shouldjs/should.js/wiki/FAQ). ## Example ```javascript var should = require('should'); var user = { name: 'tj' , pets: ['tobi', 'loki', 'jane', 'bandit'] }; user.should.have.property('name', 'tj'); user.should.have.property('pets').with.lengthOf(4); // If the object was created with Object.create(null) // then it doesn't inherit `Object.prototype`, so it will not have `.should` getter // so you can do: should(user).have.property('name', 'tj'); // also you can test in that way for null's should(null).not.be.ok(); someAsyncTask(foo, function(err, result){ should.not.exist(err); should.exist(result); result.bar.should.equal(foo); }); ``` ## To begin 1. Install it: ```bash $ npm install should --save-dev ``` 2. Require it and use: ```js var should = require('should'); (5).should.be.exactly(5).and.be.a.Number(); ``` ```js var should = require('should/as-function'); should(10).be.exactly(5).and.be.a.Number(); ``` 3. For TypeScript users: ```js import * as should from 'should'; (0).should.be.Number(); ``` ## In browser Well, even when browsers by complaints of authors have 100% es5 support, it does not mean it has no bugs. Please see [wiki](https://github.com/shouldjs/should.js/wiki/Known-Bugs) for known bugs. If you want to use _should_ in browser, use the `should.js` file in the root of this repository, or build it yourself. To build a fresh version: ```bash $ npm install $ npm run browser ``` The script is exported to `window.should`: ```js should(10).be.exactly(10) ``` You can easy install it with npm or bower: ```sh npm install should -D # or bower install shouldjs/should.js ``` ## API docs Actual api docs generated by jsdoc comments and available at [http://shouldjs.github.io](http://shouldjs.github.io). ## Usage examples Please look on usage in [examples](https://github.com/shouldjs/examples) ## .not `.not` negates the current assertion. ## .any `.any` allow for assertions with multiple parameters to assert any of the parameters (but not all). This is similar to the native JavaScript [array.some](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/some). # Assertions ## chaining assertions Every assertion will return a `should.js`-wrapped Object, so assertions can be chained. To help chained assertions read more clearly, you can use the following helpers anywhere in your chain: `.an`, `.of`, `.a`, `.and`, `.be`, `.have`, `.with`, `.is`, `.which`. Use them for better readability; they do nothing at all. For example: ```js user.should.be.an.instanceOf(Object).and.have.property('name', 'tj'); user.pets.should.be.instanceof(Array).and.have.lengthOf(4); ``` Almost all assertions return the same object - so you can easy chain them. But some (eg: `.length` and `.property`) move the assertion object to a property value, so be careful. ## Adding own assertions Adding own assertion is pretty easy. You need to call `should.Assertion.add` function. It accept 2 arguments: 1. name of assertion method (string) 2. assertion function (function) What assertion function should do. It should check only positive case. `should` will handle `.not` itself. `this` in assertion function will be instance of `should.Assertion` and you **must** define in any way this.params object in your assertion function call before assertion check happen. `params` object can contain several fields: - `operator` - it is string which describe your assertion - `actual` it is actual value, you can assume it is your own this.obj if you need to define you own - `expected` it is any value that expected to be matched this.obj You can assume its usage in generating AssertionError message like: expected `obj`? || this.obj not? `operator` `expected`? In `should` sources appeared 2 kinds of usage of this method. First not preferred and used **only** for shortcuts to other assertions, e.g how `.should.be.true()` defined: ```javascript Assertion.add('true', function() { this.is.exactly(true); }); ``` There you can see that assertion function do not define own `this.params` and instead call within the same assertion `.exactly` that will fill `this.params`. **You should use this way very carefully, but you can use it**. Second way preferred and i assume you will use it instead of first. ```javascript Assertion.add('true', function() { this.params = { operator: 'to be true', expected: true }; should(this.obj).be.exactly(true); }); ``` in this case this.params defined and then used new assertion context (because called `.should`). Internally this way does not create any edge cases as first. ```javascript Assertion.add('asset', function() { this.params = { operator: 'to be asset' }; this.obj.should.have.property('id').which.is.a.Number(); this.obj.should.have.property('path'); }) //then > ({ id: '10' }).should.be.an.asset(); AssertionError: expected { id: '10' } to be asset expected '10' to be a number > ({ id: 10 }).should.be.an.asset(); AssertionError: expected { id: 10 } to be asset expected { id: 10 } to have property path ``` ## Additional projects * [`should-sinon`](https://github.com/shouldjs/sinon) - adds additional assertions for sinon.js * [`should-immutable`](https://github.com/shouldjs/should-immutable) - extends different parts of should.js to make immutable.js first-class citizen in should.js * [`should-http`](https://github.com/shouldjs/http) - adds small assertions for assertion on http responses for node only * [`should-jq`](https://github.com/shouldjs/jq) - assertions for jq (need maintainer) * [`karma-should`](https://github.com/seegno/karma-should) - make more or less easy to work karma with should.js * [`should-spies`](https://github.com/shouldjs/spies) - small and dirty simple zero dependencies spies ## Contributions [Actual list of contributors](https://github.com/visionmedia/should.js/graphs/contributors) if you want to show it your friends. To run the tests for _should_ simply run: $ npm test See also [CONTRIBUTING](./CONTRIBUTING.md). ## OMG IT EXTENDS OBJECT???!?!@ Yes, yes it does, with a single getter _should_, and no it won't break your code, because it does this **properly** with a non-enumerable property. Also it is possible use it without extension. Just use `require('should/as-function')` everywhere. ## License MIT. See LICENSE for details.