Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Steve Gravrock
434575f49d Use one declaration per statement
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.
2026-03-11 06:30:46 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
168ff0a751 Move private APIs to private namespace
Fixes #2078
2025-09-27 13:21:09 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
7683325d68 Improved specs for async matcher error messages 2024-12-31 10:10:40 -08:00
Andrei D
a1591da25d improved error msg on toBeRehectedWithError and all other built-in async matchers 2024-12-22 17:43:47 +02:00
Steve Gravrock
1166d10e43 Use const/let in specs, not var 2022-04-16 13:41:44 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
fe0a83ba87 Removed support for Internet Explorer 2021-07-23 21:46:15 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
d27bb8fa96 Run Prettier on all files 2020-09-29 18:05:38 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
4e2f703615 Check for syntax and standard library objects that don't work in IE 2020-07-01 17:34:59 -07:00
Steve Gravrock
1f23f1e4d2 Inject a per-runable pretty printer into MatchersUtil
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.
2020-02-10 17:26:00 -08:00
Steve Gravrock
dec67bd535 Don't require matchers and asymmetric equality testers to pass custom object formatters back to Jasmine
This makes it easier to write high quality matchers and asymmetric equality
testers, and is also a step toward supporting custom object formatters.

Previously, Jasmine passed custom object formatters as the second argument
to matcher factories and as and the second argument to asymmetric equality
testers' `asymmetricMatch` method. Matchers and asymmetric equality testers
were responsible for passing the custom object formatters to methods like
`matchersUtil#equals`:

  function toEqual(util, customEqualityTesters) {
    return {
      compare: function(actual, expected) {
        // ...
        result.pass = util.equals(actual, expected, customEqualityTesters, diffBuilder);

And:

  ArrayContaining.prototype.asymmetricMatch = function(other, customTesters) {
    // ...
    for (var i = 0; i < this.sample.length; i++) {
      var item = this.sample[i];
      if (!j$.matchersUtil.contains(other, item, customTesters)) {
        return false;
      }
    }

With this change, that is no longer necessary. Matchers and asymmetric
equality testers can ignore the existence of custom equality testers and
still fully support them:

  function toEqual(util) {
    return {
      compare: function(actual, expected) {
        // ...
        result.pass = util.equals(actual, expected, diffBuilder);

And:

  ArrayContaining.prototype.asymmetricMatch = function(other, matchersUtil) {
    // ...
    for (var i = 0; i < this.sample.length; i++) {
      var item = this.sample[i];
      if (!matchersUtil.contains(other, item)) {
        return false;
      }
    }

The old interfaces are still supported, for now, but will be deprecated
in a future commit and removed in the next major release after that.

In addition to making matchers and custom equality testers simpler,
this change sets the stage for adding support for custom object
formatters. Those will be architecturally similar to custom equality
testers, and by injecting a `MatchersUtil` instance everywhere we can
add them without requiring user code to pass them around as used to be
the case with custom object formatters.
2020-02-10 17:25:50 -08:00
Tony Brix
f77ee32c56 Add custom async matchers 2019-08-30 09:30:14 -07:00
Gregg Van Hove
1e47dcf2cc Pull async matchers out to their own functions
- Makes AsyncExpectation closer to Expectation
2018-10-23 16:02:31 -07:00