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Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3

You're reading from   Frontend Development Projects with Vue.js 3 Learn the fundamentals of building scalable web applications and dynamic user interfaces with Vue.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234991
Length 628 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (4):
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Hugo Di Francesco Hugo Di Francesco
Author Profile Icon Hugo Di Francesco
Hugo Di Francesco
Clifford Gurney Clifford Gurney
Author Profile Icon Clifford Gurney
Clifford Gurney
Raymond Camden Raymond Camden
Author Profile Icon Raymond Camden
Raymond Camden
Maya Shavin Maya Shavin
Author Profile Icon Maya Shavin
Maya Shavin
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction and Crash Course
2. Chapter 1: Starting Your First Vue Project FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Working with Data 4. Chapter 3: Vite and Vue Devtools 5. Part 2: Building Your First Vue App
6. Chapter 4: Nesting Components (Modularity) 7. Chapter 5: The Composition API 8. Chapter 6: Global Component Composition 9. Chapter 7: Routing 10. Chapter 8: Animations and Transitions 11. Part 3: Global State Management
12. Chapter 9: The State of Vue State Management 13. Chapter 10: State Management with Pinia 14. Part 4: Testing and Application Deployment
15. Chapter 11: Unit Testing 16. Chapter 12: End-to-End Testing 17. Chapter 13: Deploying Your Code to the Web 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Intercepting HTTP requests

As mentioned in previous sections, Cypress is designed as a JavaScript E2E testing solution. This means that it comes with built-ins such as assertions, automatic wait/retries, sane defaults for running the application, and extensive mocking functionality.

HTTP requests can be slow and tend to introduce flaky behavior into tests. What’s meant by flaky is intermittent false negatives – that is, failures that are not caused by an application issue but rather by connectivity issues (for example, between the server running the tests and the backend hosts).

We would also be testing the implementation of the backend system. When using Continuous Integration (CI), this would mean having to run the backend systems in whichever CI pipeline step needs to run E2E tests.

Usually, when the backend requests are intercepted and a mock response is sent, we also say that the HTTP requests are stubbed in order to avoid tests flaking (meaning intermittent...

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