- Allow users to set the pretty-printer's recursion depth
- When pretty-printing objects, don't include inherited properties.
- Change toBeCloseTo matcher to be more consistent
- Added toBeNaN matcher
- Add checkbox to test runner which toggles catching of exceptions duri
- Add config option which stops jasmine from capturing exceptions in a
Currently, jasmine's pretty printer traverses objects
to 40 levels of nesting. If an object is more deeply
nested than that, an exception is thrown. I find that
after a few levels of nesting, the output becomes
difficult to read. The process of serializing such
deep objects also sometimes crashes the browser or
causes a 'slow script' warning.
This commit exposes a 'MAX_PRETTY_PRINT_DEPTH' option.
It also causes the pretty printer to skip over
parts of an object that are nested to deeply by simply
printing out 'Object' or 'Array', rather than throwing
an exception.
When making assertions about complex objects, Jasmine's
failure message are sometimes gigantic and difficult
to read because the string representation of an object
contains all of the methods and properties in its
prototype chain. This commit causes the pretty printer
to only display on object's own properties.
This blocks will be run even when a preceeding block sets the abort
flag. This is so that we can support afterEach calls running when the
spec fails due to a timeout.
The current code makes the assumption that if window is undefined it is
being run in an environment which supports the CommonJS Modules spec.
This is not the case when Jasmine is being run in rhino or SpiderMonkey
(smjs) without EnvJS.
The fix is simply to check that exports is an object.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Locke <kevin@kevinlocke.name>
Move Browser & Node specs to test against lib/jasmine.js instead of the separate source. Yes, this makes development a little harder but it's better to test that jasmine.js was built correctly.