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Svelte with Test-Driven Development

You're reading from   Svelte with Test-Driven Development Advance your skills and write effective automated tests with Vitest, Playwright, and Cucumber.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837638338
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Daniel Irvine Daniel Irvine
Author Profile Icon Daniel Irvine
Daniel Irvine
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Learning the TDD Cycle
2. Chapter 1: Setting up for Testing FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introducing the Red-Green-Refactor Workflow 4. Chapter 3: Loading Data into a Route 5. Chapter 4: Saving Form Data 6. Chapter 5: Validating Form Data 7. Chapter 6: Editing Form Data 8. Part 2: Refactoring Tests and Application Code
9. Chapter 7: Tidying up Test Suites 10. Chapter 8: Creating Matchers to Simplify Tests 11. Chapter 9: Extracting Logic Out of the Framework 12. Chapter 10: Test-Driving API Endpoints 13. Chapter 11: Replacing Behavior with a Side-By-Side Implementation 14. Chapter 12: Using Component Mocks to Clarify Tests 15. Chapter 13: Adding Cucumber Tests 16. Part 3: Testing SvelteKit Features
17. Chapter 14: Testing Authentication 18. Chapter 15: Test-Driving Svelte Stores 19. Chapter 16: Test-Driving Service Workers 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Extracting a factory method for creating data objects

It’s time to simplify the Arrange phase of the tests using a factory method named createBirthday.

The last section mentioned how each of the Arrange-Act-Assert phases needs a different treatment for simplification. A key method for the Arrange phase is the use of factories. You already created one of those in Chapter 4, Saving Form Data. That was the createFormDataRequest method that you used in the preceding section.

Using test factories to hide irrelevant data

Factory methods help you generate supporting objects in the shortest amount of code possible. One way they do that is by setting default values for object properties so that you don’t need to specify them. You’re then free to override those defaults in each individual test.

Hiding necessary but irrelevant data is a key method for keeping unit tests succinct and clear.

Our birthday objects have a very simple structure, with just three fields...

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