How to write a test which expects an Error to be thrown in Jasmine?

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忘了有多久
忘了有多久 2020-11-28 17:26

I\'m trying to write a test for the Jasmine Test Framework which expects an error. At the moment I\'m using a Jasmine Node.js integration from GitHub.

In my Node mod

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  • 2020-11-28 18:05

    For anyone who still might be facing this issue, for me the posted solution didn't work and it kept on throwing this error: Error: Expected function to throw an exception. I later realised that the function which I was expecting to throw an error was an async function and was expecting promise to be rejected and then throw error and that's what I was doing in my code:

    throw new Error('REQUEST ID NOT FOUND');
    

    and thats what I did in my test and it worked:

    it('Test should throw error if request not found', willResolve(() => {
             const promise = service.getRequestStatus('request-id');
                    return expectToReject(promise).then((err) => {
                        expect(err.message).toEqual('REQUEST NOT FOUND');
                    });
                }));
    
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  • 2020-11-28 18:06

    As mentioned previously, a function needs to be passed to toThrow as it is the function you're describing in your test: "I expect this function to throw x"

    expect(() => parser.parse(raw))
      .toThrow(new Error('Parsing is not possible'));
    

    If using Jasmine-Matchers you can also use one of the following when they suit the situation;

    // I just want to know that an error was
    // thrown and nothing more about it
    expect(() => parser.parse(raw))
      .toThrowAnyError();
    

    or

    // I just want to know that an error of 
    // a given type was thrown and nothing more
    expect(() => parser.parse(raw))
      .toThrowErrorOfType(TypeError);
    
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  • 2020-11-28 18:10

    You are using:

    expect(fn).toThrow(e)
    

    But if you'll have a look on the function comment (expected is string):

    294 /**
    295  * Matcher that checks that the expected exception was thrown by the actual.
    296  *
    297  * @param {String} expected
    298  */
    299 jasmine.Matchers.prototype.toThrow = function(expected) {
    

    I suppose you should probably write it like this (using lambda - anonymous function):

    expect(function() { parser.parse(raw); } ).toThrow("Parsing is not possible");
    

    This is confirmed in the following example:

    expect(function () {throw new Error("Parsing is not possible")}).toThrow("Parsing is not possible");
    

    Douglas Crockford strongly recommends this approach, instead of using "throw new Error()" (prototyping way):

    throw {
       name: "Error",
       message: "Parsing is not possible"
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-28 18:10

    I replace Jasmine's toThrow matcher with the following, which lets you match on the exception's name property or its message property. For me this makes tests easier to write and less brittle, as I can do the following:

    throw {
       name: "NoActionProvided",
       message: "Please specify an 'action' property when configuring the action map."
    }
    

    and then test with the following:

    expect (function () {
       .. do something
    }).toThrow ("NoActionProvided");
    

    This lets me tweak the exception message later without breaking tests, when the important thing is that it threw the expected type of exception.

    This is the replacement for toThrow that allows this:

    jasmine.Matchers.prototype.toThrow = function(expected) {
      var result = false;
      var exception;
      if (typeof this.actual != 'function') {
        throw new Error('Actual is not a function');
      }
      try {
        this.actual();
      } catch (e) {
        exception = e;
      }
      if (exception) {
          result = (expected === jasmine.undefined || this.env.equals_(exception.message || exception, expected.message || expected) || this.env.equals_(exception.name, expected));
      }
    
      var not = this.isNot ? "not " : "";
    
      this.message = function() {
        if (exception && (expected === jasmine.undefined || !this.env.equals_(exception.message || exception, expected.message || expected))) {
          return ["Expected function " + not + "to throw", expected ? expected.name || expected.message || expected : " an exception", ", but it threw", exception.name || exception.message || exception].join(' ');
        } else {
          return "Expected function to throw an exception.";
        }
      };
    
      return result;
    };
    
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  • 2020-11-28 18:14

    I know that is more code but you can also do:

    try
       do something
       @fail Error("should send a Exception")
     catch e
       expect(e.name).toBe "BLA_ERROR"
       expect(e.message).toBe 'Message'
    
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  • 2020-11-28 18:15

    A more elegant solution than creating an anonymous function who's sole purpose is to wrap another, is to use es5's bind function. The bind function creates a new function that, when called, has its this keyword set to the provided value, with a given sequence of arguments preceding any provided when the new function is called.

    Instead of:

    expect(function () { parser.parse(raw, config); } ).toThrow("Parsing is not possible");

    Consider:

    expect(parser.parse.bind(parser, raw, config)).toThrow("Parsing is not possible");

    The bind syntax allows you to test functions with different this values, and in my opinion makes the test more readable. See also: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13233194/1248889

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