* See #1764 from @dubzzz
* Property tests are only run in Node, not browser.
* The Travis build sets JASMINE_LONG_PROPERTY_TESTS to enable much more
thorough (but slow) testing.
If the tests only fail on one browser, it's usually IE. So testing
IE first gives us faster feedback in cases where we're actively
watching the Travis build.
Turns this output:
Expected $[0].foo = Object({ a: 4, b: 5 }) to equal <jasmine.objectContaining(Object({ a: 1, c: 3 }))>.
into this:
Expected $[0].foo.a = 4 to equal 1.
Expected $[0].foo.c = undefined to equal 3.
And turns this output:
Expected spy jasmineDone to have been called with:
[ ... snipped very long expected call ]
but actual calls were:
[ ... snipped very long actual call ]
Call 0:
Expected $[0] = Object({ overallStatus: 'failed', totalTime: 1, incompleteReason: undefined, order: Order({ random: true, seed: '88732', sort: Function }), failedExpectations: [ Object({ matcherName: 'toBeResolved', passed: false, message: 'Suite "a suite" ran a "toBeResolved" expectation after it finished.
Did you forget to return or await the result of expectAsync?', error: undefined, errorForStack: Error, actual: [object Promise], expected: [ ], globalErrorType: 'lateExpeztation' }) ], deprecationWarnings: [ ] }) to equal <jasmine.objectContaining(Object({ failedExpectations: [ <jasmine.objectContaining(Object({ passed: false, globalErrorType: 'lateExpectation', message: 'Suite "a suite" ran a "toBeResolved" expectation after it finished.
Did you forget to return or await the result of expectAsync?', matcherName: 'toBeResolved' }))> ] }))>.
into this:
Expected spy jasmineDone to have been called with:
[ ... snipped very long expected call ]
but actual calls were:
[ ... snipped very long actual call ]
Call 0:
Expected $[0].failedExpectations[0].globalErrorType = 'lateExpeztation' to equal 'lateExpectation'.
This makes it easier to see where each failure message begins and ends.
Before:
Some context: a
multiline
message
After:
Some context:
a
multiline
message
It's very easy to forget to `await` or `return` the promise returned
from `expectAsync`. When that happens, the expectation failure will
occur after the spec or suite's result has been reported to reporters,
and the failure will typically not be shown to the user. This change
adds a top-level suite failure in that case, similar to the way we
report unhandled exceptions or promise rejections that occur after the
runable completes. Adding the error at the top level gives us the best
chance of getting in before the set of failures we add it to is sent
to reporters.
See #1752.
PhantomJS is at end of life, and the last version of Selenium that supported
it was 3.6.0, released almost three years ago. We can't test Jasmine against
PhantomJS without pinning key pieces of the project to increasingly outdated
versions of key libraries.
If the actual value of a test was a string, this was matching against arrays
that contained the strings. This was due to the use of the contains matcher,
which against string looks for substrings, when it was intended to look for
array elements.
The first number is the error message in HTML5 browser, which does not include
the call stack. The error instance allows logging the complete call stack in
reporters.
There are now multiple ways to do async functions, and callbacks
are probably the least common in new code, so the message should
be more general rather than referring to callbacks.