Open greenkeeper[bot] opened 7 years ago
Update to this version instead 🚀
4.0 has been a huge undertaking by the chai community! A lot has changed to ensure Chai 4 is a stable, reliable, well documented codebase. Here are just some of the major improvements:
almost all documentation has been rewritten, with detailed instructions on how assertions work, which flags they can be combined with and the best practices for how to use them.
deep equality has been rewritten from the ground up to support ES6 types like Map
and Set
, and better support existing types. It is now also much, much faster than before and allows us to bring some great improvements in upcoming releases.
we have made sure the deep
flag now only ever does deep equality. Beforehand, it would sometimes also be used to test nested properties (for example expect(foo).to.have.deep.property('bar.baz')
. For nested assertions, please now use the .nested
flag.
many assertions have become more strict, which means you get better error messages explaining where things have gone wrong. For the most part, this wont mean error messages where there weren't error messages before, but it will mean better error messages to replace the, sometimes cryptic, default TypeError
messages.
we've added detections and helpful error messages for common mistakes and typos. The error messages will, in some cases, point you to documentation or in other cases suggest alternatives. These messages will continue to be improved in future releases, so let us know if you have any suggestions!
We no longer support Node v0.10 and v0.12 (since their LTS has ended) (PRs: #816, #901)
Instead of allowing the user to write the path of a property, now the deep flag performs a deep equality comparison when used with the .property
assertion.
If you want the old behavior of using the dot or bracket notation to denote the property you want to assert against you can use the new .nested
flag. (Related Issues: #745, #743, PRs: #758, #757)
const obj = {a: 1};
// The `.deep` flag now does deep equality comparisons
expect({foo: obj}).to.have.deep.property('foo', {a: 1});
// Use the `nested` flag if you want to assert against a nested property using the bracket or dot notation
expect({foo: obj}).to.have.nested.property('foo.a', 1);
// You can also use both flags combined
const obj2 = {a: {b: 2}};
expect({foo: obj2}).to.have.deep.nested.property('foo.a', {b: 2});
Please notice that the old methods which used the old behavior of the deep
flag on the assert
interface have been renamed. They all have had the deep
word changed by the nested
word. If you want to know more about this please take a look at #757.
Previously, expect(obj).not.property(name, val)
would throw an Error if obj
didn't have a property named name
. This change causes the assertion to pass instead.
The assert.propertyNotVal
and assert.deepPropertyNotVal
assertions were renamed to assert.notPropertyVal
and assert.notDeepPropertyVal
, respectively. (Related Issues: #16, #743, #758)
You can now use the deep
flag for the .include
assertion in order to perform a deep
equality check to see if something is included on the target
.
Previously, .include
was using strict equality (===
) for non-negated property inclusion, but deep
equality for negated property inclusion and array inclusion.
This change causes the .include assertion to always use strict equality unless the deep flag is set.
Please take a look at this comment if you want to know more about it. (Related Issues: #743, PRs: #760, #761)
const obj = {a: 1};
expect([obj]).to.deep.include({a:1});
expect({foo: obj}).to.deep.include({foo: {a:1}});
Fix unstable behavior of the NaN
assertion. Now we use the suggested ES6 implementation.
The new implementation is now more correct, strict and simple. While the old one threw false positives, the new implementation only checks if something is NaN
(or not if the .not
flag is used) and nothing else. (Related Issues: #498, #682, #681, PRs: #508)
// Only `NaN` will be considered to be `NaN` and nothing else
expect(NaN).to.be.NaN;
// Anything that is not `NaN` cannot be considered as `NaN`
expect('randomString').not.to.be.NaN;
expect(true).not.to.be.NaN;
expect({}).not.to.be.NaN;
expect(4).not.to.be.NaN;
The Typed Array types are now truncated if they're too long (in this case, if they exceed the truncateThreshold
value on the config
). (Related Issues: #441, PRs: #576)
var arr = [];
for (var i = 1; i <= 1000; i++) {
arr.push(i);
}
// The assertion below will truncate the diff shown and the enormous typed array will be shown as:
// [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, ... ] instead of printing the whole typed array
chai.expect(new Float32Array(100)).to.equal(1);
The assertions: within
, above
, least
, below
, most
, increase
, decrease
will throw an error if the assertion's target or arguments are not numbers. (Related Issues: #691, PRs: #692, #796)
// These will throw errors, for example:
expect(null).to.be.within(0, 1);
expect(null).to.be.above(10);
expect(null).to.be.at.least(20);
expect(null).to.be.below(20);
expect(null).to.be.at.most(20);
expect(null).to.increase.by(20);
expect(null).to.decrease.by(20);
// This will not:
expect('string').to.have.a.lengthOf.at.least(3);
Previously, expect(obj).not.ownProperty(name, val)
would throw an Error if obj didn't have an own property (non-inherited) named name. This change causes the assertion to pass instead. (Related Issues: #795, #, PRs: #744, #810)*
expect({ foo: 'baz' }).to.not.have.own.property('quux', 'baz');
The .empty
assertion will now throw when it is passed non-string primitives and functions (PRs: #763, #812)
// These will throw TypeErrors:
expect(Symbol()).to.be.empty;
expect(function() {}).to.be.empty;
expect(true).to.be.empty;
expect(1).to.be.empty
Assertion subject (obj
) changes when using ownProperty
or own.property
and thus enables chaining. (Related Issues: #281, PRs: #641)
expect({val: 20}).to.have.own.property('val').above(10);
The .change
, .increase
, and .decrease
assertions changed from chainable method assertions to method assertions. They don't have any chaining behavior, and there's no generic semantic benefit to chaining them. (Related Issues: #917, PRs: #925)
// This will not work anymore because there is no benefit to chaining these assertions:
expect(function() {}).to.change.by(2)
expect(function() {}).to.increase.by(2)
expect(function() {}).to.decrease.by(2)
The utils
(second argument passed to the chai.use
callback function) no longer exports the getPathValue
function. If you want to use that please use the pathval
module, which is what chai uses internally now. (Related Issues: #457, #737, PRs: #830)
(For plugin authors) Throw when calling _super
on overwriteMethod
if the method being overwritten is undefined
.
Currently if the method you are trying to overwrite is not defined and your new method calls _super
it will throw an Error
.(Related Issues: #467, PRs: #528)
Before this change, calling _super
would simply return this
.
// Considering the method `imaginaryMethod` does not exist, this would throw an error for example:
chai.use(function (chai, utilities) {
chai.Assertion.overwriteMethod('imaginaryMethod', function (_super) {
return function () {
_super.apply(this, arguments);
}
});
});
// This will throw an error since you are calling `_super` which should be a method (in this case, the overwritten assertion) that does not exist
expect('anything').to.imaginaryMethod();
(For plugin authors) Now showDiff
is turned on by default whenever the showDiff
flag is anything other than false
.
This issue will mostly affect plugin creators or anyone that made extensions to the core, since this affects the Assertion.assert
method. (Related Issues: #574, PRs: #515)
// Now whenever you call `Assertion.assert` with anything that is not false for the `showDiff` flag it will be true
// The assertion error that was thrown will have the `showDiff` flag turned on since it was not passed to the `assert` method
try {
new chai.Assertion().assert(
'one' === 'two'
, 'expected #{this} to equal #{exp}'
, 'expected #{this} to not equal #{act}'
, 'one'
, 'two'
);
} catch(e) {
assert.isTrue(e.showDiff);
}
// The assertion error that was thrown will have the `showDiff` flag turned off since here we passed `false` explicitly
try {
new chai.Assertion().assert(
'one' === 'two'
, 'expected #{this} to equal #{exp}'
, 'expected #{this} to not equal #{act}'
, 'one'
, 'two'
, false
);
} catch(e) {
assert.isFalse(e.showDiff);
}
Throw when non-existent property is read. (Related Issues: #407, #766 PRs: #721, #770)
This is a potentially breaking change. Your build will fail if you have typos in your property assertions
Before 4.x.x
when using property assertions they would not throw an error if you wrote it incorrectly.
The example below, for example, would pass:
expect(true).to.be.ture; // Oops, typo, now Chai will throw an Error
Since this implementation depends on ES6 Proxies
it will only work on platforms that support it.
This property can be enabled (default) or disabled through the config.useProxy
property, for example:
chai.config.useProxy = false; // disable use of Proxy
Add fix suggestions when accessing a nonexistent property in proxy mode. (Related Issues: #771, PRs: #782)
When a nonexistent property is accessed in proxy mode, Chai will compute the levenshtein distance to all possible properties in order to suggest the best fix to the user.
expect(false).to.be.fals; // Error: Invalid Chai property: fals. Did you mean "false"?
expect('foo').to.be.undefind; // Error: Invalid Chai property: undefind. Did you mean "undefined"?
// If the Levenshtein distance between the word and any Chai property is greater than 4, no fix will be suggested
expect('foo').to.be.fdsakfdsafsagsadgagsdfasf // error thrown, no fix suggested
When non-chainable methods (including overwritten non-chainable methods) are used incorrectly an error will be thrown with a helpful error message. (PRs: #789)
expect(true).to.equal.true; // Invalid Chai property: equal.true. See docs for proper usage of "equal".
Add a new configuration setting that describes which keys will be ignored when checking for non-existing properties on an assertion before throwing an error.
Since this implementation depends on ES6 Proxies
it will only work on platforms that support it. Also, if you disable config.useProxy
, this setting will have no effect. (Related Issues: #765, PRs: #774)
chai.config.proxyExcludedKeys.push('nonExistingProp');
expect('my string').to.nonExistingProp; // This won't throw an error now
Add script that registers should as a side-effect. (Related Issues: #594, #693 PRs: #604)
// You can now write:
import 'chai/should';
// as opposed to:
import {should} from 'chai';
should();
You can also register should via a mocha
option: mocha --require chai/should
.
The change
assertion accepts a function as object. (Related Issues: #544, PRs: #607)
// Now you can also check if the return value of a function changes, for example
assert.increases(
someOperation,
() => getSomething().length
)
You can also assert for a delta using the by
assertion alongside the change
, increase
and decrease
assertions. (Related Issues: #339, PRs: #621)
// You can use `.by` to assert the amount you want something to change
var obj = { val: 10 };
var increaseByTwo = function() { obj.val += 2 };
var decreaseByTwo = function() { obj.val -= 2 };
var increaseByThree = function() { obj.val += 3 };
expect(increaseByThree).to.change(obj, 'val').by(3);
expect(increaseByTwo).to.increase(obj, 'val').by(2);
expect(decreaseByTwo).to.decrease(obj, 'val').by(2);
// Please notice that if you want to assert something did change but not by some amount you need to use `.not` **after** the `change` related assertion
// Take a look at the examples below:
expect(increaseByThree).to.change(obj, 'val').but.not.by(5)
expect(increaseByTwo).to.increase(obj, 'val').but.not.by(1)
expect(decreaseByTwo).to.decrease(obj, 'val').but.not.by(1)
// The `.keys` assertion now works on `map`s and `set`s natively, like the examples below:
expect(new Map([[{objKey: 'value'}, 'value'], [1, 2]])).to.contain.key({objKey: 'value'});
expect(new Map([[{objKey: 'value'}, 'value'], [1, 2]])).to.contain.any.keys([{objKey: 'value'}, {anotherKey: 'anotherValue'}]);
expect(new Map([['firstKey', 'firstValue'], [1, 2]])).to.contain.all.keys('firstKey', 1);
expect(new Set([['foo', 'bar'], ['example', 1]])).to.have.any.keys('foo');
// You can also use `.deep` when asserting agains `Map`s and `Set`s
expect(new Map([[{objKey: 'value'}, 'value'], [1, 2]])).to.contain.any.deep.keys([{objKey: 'value'}, {anotherKey: 'anotherValue'}]);
expect(new Map([['firstKey', 'firstValue'], [1, 2]])).to.contain.all.deep.keys('firstKey', 1);
expect(new Set([['foo', 'bar'], ['example', 1]])).to.have.any.deep.keys('foo');
Add compatibility with strict mode. (Related Issues: #578, PRs: #665)
// This means you can now run your code with the `--use_strict` flag on Node
// If want to understand more about this please read the issue related to this change
Add does
and but
as new no-op assertion. (Related Issues: #700, #339 PRs: #621, #701)
// You can now write assertions forming phrases with these two new words:
expect(increaseByThree).to.change(obj, 'val').but.not.by(5);
expect(foobar).to.have.property("baz").which.does.not.have.property("thing");
Allow use
to be imported using new ES6 module syntax. (Related Issues: #718, PRs: #724)
// You can now import `use` using the ES6 module syntax, like the example below:
import sinonChai from "sinon-chai";
import {expect, use} from "chai";
use(sinonChai);
You can also use require
alongside the new ES6 destructuring feature:
const sinonChai = require('sinon-chai');
const {expect, use} = require("chai");
use(sinonChai);
Add ordered flag for members assertion. (Related Issues: #717, PRs: #728)
// You can now use the `ordered` flag to assert the order of elements when using the `members` assertion:
expect([1, 2, 3]).to.include.ordered.members([1, 2]); // This passes
expect([1, 2, 3]).to.include.ordered.members([2, 3]); // This will fail! Read the docs to know more.
Add .own
flag to .property
assertion. It does the same thing as .ownProperty
and cannot be used alongisde the new .nested
flag. (Related Issues: #795, PRs: #810)
expect({a: 1}).to.have.own.property('a');
// The example below will thrown an Error
expect({a: {b: 1}}).to.have.own.nested.property('a.b', 1);
Add .deep
support to .property
assertion. (Related Issues: #795, PRs: #810)
expect({ foo: { bar: 'baz' } }).to.have.deep.own.property('foo', { bar: 'baz' });
expect({ foo: { bar: { baz: 'quux' } } }).to.have.deep.nested.property('foo.bar', { baz: 'quux' });
The .empty
assertion will now work with ES6 collections (PRs: #763, #812, #814)
Please notice that this assertion will throw an error when it is passed a WeakMap
or WeakSet
.
expect(new Set()).to.be.empty;
expect(new Map()).to.be.empty;
// The examples below will throw a TypeError:
expect(new WeakSet()).to.be.empty;
expect(new WeakMap()).to.be.empty;
Add script that registers should
as a side-effect. This change allows you to register should
via a mocha option by using: mocha spec.js -r chai/register-should
and also allows you to register the testing style globally. (Issues: #693, PRs: #868)
require('chai/register-should'); // Using Should style
Add script that registers assert
as a side-effect. This change allows you to register assert
via a mocha option by using: mocha spec.js -r chai/register-assert
(Issues: #693, PRs: #868, #872)
require('chai/register-assert'); // Using Assert style
Add script that registers expect
as a side-effect. This change allows you to register expect
via a mocha option by using: mocha spec.js -r chai/register-expect
(Issues: #693, PRs: #868, #872)
require('chai/register-expect'); // Using Expect style
When the length
assertion is chained directly off of an uninvoked method, it references function
's built-in length
property instead of Chai's length
assertion. This commit adds a guard to Chai methods to detect this problem and throw a helpful error message that advises the user on how to correct it. (Issues: #684, #841, PRs: #897)
Allows the lockSsfi
flag to be set when creating new Assertion. This flag controls whether or not the given ssfi
flag should retain its current value, even as assertions are chained off of this object. This is usually set to true
when creating a new assertion from within another assertion. It's also temporarily set to true
before an overwritten assertion gets called by the overwriting assertion. (Issues: #878, #904, PRs: #922)
// This will lock the stack stack function from this line on
// The SSFI is the reference to the starting point for removing irrelevant frames from the stack trace
new Assertion(obj, msg, ssfi, true).to.have.property('length')
The nestedInclude
, deepNestedInclude
, ownInclude
and deepOwnInclude
assertions and there negated pairs were added to the assert
interface. (Issues: #905, PRs: #964)
// '[]' and '.' in property names can be escaped using double backslashes.
assert.nestedInclude({'.a': {'b': 'x'}}, {'\\.a.[b]': 'x'});
assert.notNestedInclude({'.a': {'b': 'x'}}, {'\\.a.b': 'y'});
assert.deepNestedInclude({a: {b: [{x: 1}]}}, {'a.b[0]': {x: 1}});
assert.notDeepNestedInclude({a: {b: [{x: 1}]}}, {'a.b[0]': {y: 1}});
assert.ownInclude({ a: 1 }, { a: 1 });
assert.notOwnInclude({ a: 1 }, { b: 2 });
assert.deepOwnInclude({a: {b: 2}}, {a: {b: 2}});
assert.notDeepOwnInclude({a: {b: 2}}, {a: {c: 3}});
this
. (Related Issues: #562, #684, #723, PRs: #642, #660).members
assertion. (Related Issues: #511, PRs: #702)same.members
to properly handle duplicates by treating each one as a unique member. (Related Issues: #590, PRs: #739)overwriteMethod
, overwriteProperty
, addChainableMethod
, overwriteChainableMethod
functions will return new assertion with flags copied over instead of this. (Related Issues: #562, #642, #791, PRs: #799)keys
assertions will now consider size of sets. (Related Issues: #919, PRs: #924)Update to this version instead 🚀
This release includes one new feature and a few bug fixes.
.property
assertion (#992; @meeber)expectTypes
to access ssfi
flag (#993; @meeber)The new version differs by 16 commits.
df9073c
Merge pull request #998 from v1adko/make-release
cad9933
Merge pull request #1004 from chaijs/code-owners
cf70b11
Create CODEOWNERS
3397dda
Merge pull request #1005 from meeber/skip-failing-tests
11a6f85
test: skip failing .include
tests in IE11
45cb327
chai@4.1.0
2eddd79
Add ES6 collection support to include() (#994)
3c932e2
feat: allow dates for isBelow and isAbove assertions (#990)
3bcb21c
Merge pull request #979 from chaijs/greenkeeper/browserify-14.4.0
5daceab
Merge pull request #988 from samlanning/missing-var
9116bc8
Merge pull request #993 from meeber/refactor-expect-types
351e968
Merge pull request #992 from meeber/property-target-type
e7b2384
refactor: expectTypes
to access ssfi
flag
e6ddf64
fix: check target's type in .property
assertion
7e466af
Add a missing var keyword found by lgtm.com
There are 16 commits in total.
See the full diff
Update to this version instead 🚀
This release includes a few bug and documentation fixes.
.instanceof
to allow DOM interfaces in IE11 (#1000, #1008; @meeber).include
to work with all objects (#1009, #1012; @meeber)The new version differs by 10 commits.
02ddebd
Merge pull request #1019 from meeber/release-4.1.1
ac48db3
chai@4.1.1
d2e9599
Merge pull request #1016 from chaijs/fix-reindent-code-1014
92d2cca
docs: re-indent hasAnyKeys code
b625497
Merge pull request #1012 from meeber/fix-include-types
8fa24f2
Merge pull request #1014 from zenHeart/fix-hasAnyKeys-comment
113a5b8
fix: correct hasAnyKeys comment error
c01cf30
fix: .include
to work with all objects
1847ef8
Merge pull request #1008 from meeber/fix-ie11-instanceof
c107abb
fix: .instanceof
to allow DOM interfaces in IE11
See the full diff
Version 4.0.0 of chai just got published.
The version 4.0.0 is not covered by your current version range.
Without accepting this pull request your project will work just like it did before. There might be a bunch of new features, fixes and perf improvements that the maintainers worked on for you though.
I recommend you look into these changes and try to get onto the latest version of chai. Given that you have a decent test suite, a passing build is a strong indicator that you can take advantage of these changes by merging the proposed change into your project. Otherwise this branch is a great starting point for you to work on the update.
Release Notes
4.0.0 / 2016-10-244.0.0
4.0 has been a huge undertaking by the chai community! A lot has changed to ensure Chai 4 is a stable, reliable, well documented codebase. Here are just some of the major improvements:
almost all documentation has been rewritten, with detailed instructions on how assertions work, which flags they can be combined with and the best practices for how to use them.
deep equality has been rewritten from the ground up to support ES6 types like
Map
andSet
, and better support existing types. It is now also much, much faster than before and allows us to bring some great improvements in upcoming releases.we have made sure the
deep
flag now only ever does deep equality. Beforehand, it would sometimes also be used to test nested properties (for exampleexpect(foo).to.have.deep.property('bar.baz')
. For nested assertions, please now use the.nested
flag.many assertions have become more strict, which means you get better error messages explaining where things have gone wrong. For the most part, this wont mean error messages where there weren't error messages before, but it will mean better error messages to replace the, sometimes cryptic, default
TypeError
messages.we've added detections and helpful error messages for common mistakes and typos. The error messages will, in some cases, point you to documentation or in other cases suggest alternatives. These messages will continue to be improved in future releases, so let us know if you have any suggestions!
Breaking Changes
We no longer support Node v0.10 and v0.12 (since their LTS has ended) (PRs: #816, #901)
Instead of allowing the user to write the path of a property, now the deep flag performs a deep equality comparison when used with the
.property
assertion.If you want the old behavior of using the dot or bracket notation to denote the property you want to assert against you can use the new
.nested
flag. (Related Issues: #745, #743, PRs: #758, #757)Please notice that the old methods which used the old behavior of the
deep
flag on theassert
interface have been renamed. They all have had thedeep
word changed by thenested
word. If you want to know more about this please take a look at #757.Previously,
expect(obj).not.property(name, val)
would throw an Error ifobj
didn't have a property namedname
. This change causes the assertion to pass instead.The
assert.propertyNotVal
andassert.deepPropertyNotVal
assertions were renamed toassert.notPropertyVal
andassert.notDeepPropertyVal
, respectively. (Related Issues: #16, #743, #758)You can now use the
deep
flag for the.include
assertion in order to perform adeep
equality check to see if something is included on thetarget
.Previously,
.include
was using strict equality (===
) for non-negated property inclusion, butdeep
equality for negated property inclusion and array inclusion.This change causes the .include assertion to always use strict equality unless the deep flag is set.
Please take a look at this comment if you want to know more about it. (Related Issues: #743, PRs: #760, #761)
Fix unstable behavior of the
NaN
assertion. Now we use the suggested ES6 implementation.The new implementation is now more correct, strict and simple. While the old one threw false positives, the new implementation only checks if something is
NaN
(or not if the.not
flag is used) and nothing else. (Related Issues: #498, #682, #681, PRs: #508)The Typed Array types are now truncated if they're too long (in this case, if they exceed the
truncateThreshold
value on theconfig
). (Related Issues: #441, PRs: #576)The assertions:
within
,above
,least
,below
,most
,increase
,decrease
will throw an error if the assertion's target or arguments are not numbers. (Related Issues: #691, PRs: #692, #796)Previously,
expect(obj).not.ownProperty(name, val)
would throw an Error if obj didn't have an own property (non-inherited) named name. This change causes the assertion to pass instead. (Related Issues: #795, #, PRs: #744, #810)*The
.empty
assertion will now throw when it is passed non-string primitives and functions (PRs: #763, #812)Assertion subject (
obj
) changes when usingownProperty
orown.property
and thus enables chaining. (Related Issues: #281, PRs: #641)The
.change
,.increase
, and.decrease
assertions changed from chainable method assertions to method assertions. They don't have any chaining behavior, and there's no generic semantic benefit to chaining them. (Related Issues: #917, PRs: #925)The
utils
(second argument passed to thechai.use
callback function) no longer exports thegetPathValue
function. If you want to use that please use thepathval
module, which is what chai uses internally now. (Related Issues: #457, #737, PRs: #830)(For plugin authors) Throw when calling
_super
onoverwriteMethod
if the method being overwritten isundefined
.Currently if the method you are trying to overwrite is not defined and your new method calls
_super
it will throw anError
.(Related Issues: #467, PRs: #528)Before this change, calling
_super
would simply returnthis
.(For plugin authors) Now
showDiff
is turned on by default whenever theshowDiff
flag is anything other thanfalse
.This issue will mostly affect plugin creators or anyone that made extensions to the core, since this affects the
Assertion.assert
method. (Related Issues: #574, PRs: #515)New Features
Throw when non-existent property is read. (Related Issues: #407, #766 PRs: #721, #770)
This is a potentially breaking change. Your build will fail if you have typos in your property assertions
Before
4.x.x
when using property assertions they would not throw an error if you wrote it incorrectly.The example below, for example, would pass:
Since this implementation depends on ES6
Proxies
it will only work on platforms that support it.This property can be enabled (default) or disabled through the
config.useProxy
property, for example:Add fix suggestions when accessing a nonexistent property in proxy mode. (Related Issues: #771, PRs: #782)
When a nonexistent property is accessed in proxy mode, Chai will compute the levenshtein distance to all possible properties in order to suggest the best fix to the user.
When non-chainable methods (including overwritten non-chainable methods) are used incorrectly an error will be thrown with a helpful error message. (PRs: #789)
Add a new configuration setting that describes which keys will be ignored when checking for non-existing properties on an assertion before throwing an error.
Since this implementation depends on ES6
Proxies
it will only work on platforms that support it. Also, if you disableconfig.useProxy
, this setting will have no effect. (Related Issues: #765, PRs: #774)Add script that registers should as a side-effect. (Related Issues: #594, #693 PRs: #604)
You can also register should via a
mocha
option:mocha --require chai/should
.The
change
assertion accepts a function as object. (Related Issues: #544, PRs: #607)You can also assert for a delta using the
by
assertion alongside thechange
,increase
anddecrease
assertions. (Related Issues: #339, PRs: #621).keys
assertion can now operate onmap
s andset
s. (Related Issues: #632, PRs: #633, #668)Add compatibility with strict mode. (Related Issues: #578, PRs: #665)
Add
does
andbut
as new no-op assertion. (Related Issues: #700, #339 PRs: #621, #701)Allow
use
to be imported using new ES6 module syntax. (Related Issues: #718, PRs: #724)You can also use
require
alongside the new ES6 destructuring feature:Add ordered flag for members assertion. (Related Issues: #717, PRs: #728)
Add
.own
flag to.property
assertion. It does the same thing as.ownProperty
and cannot be used alongisde the new.nested
flag. (Related Issues: #795, PRs: #810)Add
.deep
support to.property
assertion. (Related Issues: #795, PRs: #810)The
.empty
assertion will now work with ES6 collections (PRs: #763, #812, #814)Please notice that this assertion will throw an error when it is passed a
WeakMap
orWeakSet
.Add script that registers
should
as a side-effect. This change allows you to registershould
via a mocha option by using:mocha spec.js -r chai/register-should
and also allows you to register the testing style globally. (Issues: #693, PRs: #868)Add script that registers
assert
as a side-effect. This change allows you to registerassert
via a mocha option by using:mocha spec.js -r chai/register-assert
(Issues: #693, PRs: #868, #872)Add script that registers
expect
as a side-effect. This change allows you to registerexpect
via a mocha option by using:mocha spec.js -r chai/register-expect
(Issues: #693, PRs: #868, #872)When the
length
assertion is chained directly off of an uninvoked method, it referencesfunction
's built-inlength
property instead of Chai'slength
assertion. This commit adds a guard to Chai methods to detect this problem and throw a helpful error message that advises the user on how to correct it. (Issues: #684, #841, PRs: #897)Allows the
lockSsfi
flag to be set when creating new Assertion. This flag controls whether or not the givenssfi
flag should retain its current value, even as assertions are chained off of this object. This is usually set totrue
when creating a new assertion from within another assertion. It's also temporarily set totrue
before an overwritten assertion gets called by the overwriting assertion. (Issues: #878, #904, PRs: #922)The
nestedInclude
,deepNestedInclude
,ownInclude
anddeepOwnInclude
assertions and there negated pairs were added to theassert
interface. (Issues: #905, PRs: #964)Bug Fixes
this
. (Related Issues: #562, #684, #723, PRs: #642, #660).members
assertion. (Related Issues: #511, PRs: #702)same.members
to properly handle duplicates by treating each one as a unique member. (Related Issues: #590, PRs: #739)overwriteMethod
,overwriteProperty
,addChainableMethod
,overwriteChainableMethod
functions will return new assertion with flags copied over instead of this. (Related Issues: #562, #642, #791, PRs: #799)keys
assertions will now consider size of sets. (Related Issues: #919, PRs: #924)Commits
The new version differs by 350 commits.
ab1fbad
Merge pull request #973 from chaijs/chore-uncomment-travis-deploy
545ca2f
chore: uncomment travis lines
6349ff4
Merge pull request #972 from lucasfcosta/release-4.0.0
0fe98b1
chai@4.0.0
30a4451
Merge pull request #967 from lucasfcosta/remove-lib-bump
8ba95a7
Remove bump command to change lib/chai.js
0825826
Merge pull request #964 from zetamorph/assert-nestedInclude-ownInclude
f3adfd9
fix: PhantomJS 1.x incompatibility (#966)
b744130
Assert: made documentation more descriptive
33e4403
test: added custom message test to negated .nested-, .deep-, .own.include
4180242
test: added message argument to negated nested-, deep-, own- and deepOwnInclude
40bb490
assert interface: add .deepOwnInclude and notdeepOwnInclude
97b6243
assert interface: add .ownInclude and .notOwnInclude
24d7fa3
assert interface: add deepNestedInclude and notDeepNestedInclude
7063b94
assert interface: add nestedInclude and notNestedInclude
There are 250 commits in total.
See the full diff
Not sure how things should work exactly?
There is a collection of [frequently asked questions](https://greenkeeper.io/faq.html) and of course you may always [ask my humans](https://github.com/greenkeeperio/greenkeeper/issues/new).Your Greenkeeper Bot :palm_tree: