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NativeScript for Angular Mobile Development

You're reading from   NativeScript for Angular Mobile Development Creating dynamic mobile apps for iOS and Android

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125766
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Nathanael J. Anderson Nathanael J. Anderson
Author Profile Icon Nathanael J. Anderson
Nathanael J. Anderson
Nathan Walker Nathan Walker
Author Profile Icon Nathan Walker
Nathan Walker
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Get Into Shape with @NgModule FREE CHAPTER 2. Feature Modules 3. Our First View via Component Building 4. A prettier view with CSS 5. Routing and Lazy Loading 6. Running the App on iOS and Android 7. Building the Multitrack Player 8. Building an Audio Recorder 9. Empowering Your Views 10. @ngrx/store + @ngrx/effects for State Management 11. Polish with SASS 12. Unit Testing 13. Integration Testing with Appium 14. Deployment Preparation with webpack Bundling 15. Deploying to the Apple App Store 16. Deploying to Google Play

Summary

In this chapter, we discussed how to do unit tests and the pros and cons of two of the methods of doing unit tests. In a nutshell, Angular testing works for generic TypeScript code that does not call any NativeScript-specific code, and it runs your tests really quickly. The NativeScript testing harness runs inside your NativeScript application and has full access to anything you write and anything a normal NativeScript application can do. However, it requires the NativeScript application to be running to run its tests, so it might require a full build step before it can run your tests.

Now that we have discussed the two types of unit testing, hang on to your testing hat. In the next chapter, we will cover how to do end-to-end testing or full screen and application testing of your awesome application.

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