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React.js Essentials

You're reading from   React.js Essentials A fast-paced guide to designing and building scalable and maintainable web apps with React.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783551620
Length 208 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Artemij Fedosejev Artemij Fedosejev
Author Profile Icon Artemij Fedosejev
Artemij Fedosejev
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing Powerful Tools for Your Project 2. Create Your First React Element FREE CHAPTER 3. Create Your First React Component 4. Make Your React Components Reactive 5. Use Your React Components with Another Library 6. Update Your React Components 7. Build Complex React Components 8. Test Your React Application with Jest 9. Supercharge Your React Architecture with Flux 10. Prepare Your React Application for Painless Maintenance with Flux Index

Creating test suits, specs, and expectations


How does one write a test for JavaScript functions? You need a testing framework, and luckily, Facebook has built its own unit test framework for JavaScript called Jest. It is built on top of Jasmine; another well-known JavaScript test framework. Those of you who are familiar with Jasmine will find Jest's approach to testing very similar. However, I'll make no assumptions about your prior experience with testing frameworks and discuss the basics first.

The fundamental idea of unit testing is that you test only one piece of functionality in your application that usually is implemented by one function. You test it in isolation, which means that all the other parts of your application that the function depends on are not used by your tests. Instead, they are imitated by your tests. To imitate a JavaScript object is to create a fake one that simulates the behavior of the real object. In unit testing, the fake object is called mock and the process of...

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