Is it possible to unit test javascript functions that exist within a closure, so for example, given the following:
(function() {
var a = function() {
/
The biggest question here is why do you want to keep it hidden? The fact that you have this function a that you want to test is an indicator that a has a responsibility of its own that should be tested. Pulling it out and getting it under test gains much more value when weighed against the minimal risk of exposing it. If you really want to keep it hidden, then I'd suggest something similar to Manux's response where you create an object that does what a does but doesn't expose a directly. Then you could test the behavior of a by testing that object.
Revisiting the question 4 years on, I now have a better solution.
Say I'm using Gulp to minify my JavaScript, and my code looks like this:
var a = function() {}
window.b = function() {}
Not the absence of a closure. Now I set up a gulp task and have it watch my code, like so:
gulp.task('js', function () {
return gulp.src([dirs.js.src, '*.js'].join('/'))
.pipe(wrap('(function() {\n<%= contents %>\n})();'))
.pipe(jshint())
.pipe(jshint.reporter('default'))
.pipe(gulp.dest(dirs.js.dest));
});
This will wrap my code in the IIFE producing the following output:
(function() {
var a = function() {}
window.b = function() {}
)();
Now I add another Gulp task, like this
gulp.task('testJs', function () {
return gulp.src([dirs.test.src, '*.js'].join('/'))
.pipe(wrap(
[
'(function() {',
'<%= contents %>',
'// Smuggle locals out of closure for testing',
'window.a = a;',
'})();'
].join('\n')
))
.pipe(concat(package.name + '.testable.js'))
.pipe(gulp.dest(dirs.test.dest));
});
This will generate the following unsafe but testable code right in my test directory:
(function() {
var a = function() {}
window.b = function() {}
// Smuggle locals out of closure for testing
window.a = a;
)();
gulp.task('watch', function() {
gulp.watch([dirs.js.src, '**', '*.js'].join('/'), ['js', 'testJs']);
});
...and you're done.
See here for an example:
https://github.com/forwardadvance/ng-tweets
Your anonymous function could take a parameter which would be undefined when not in test mode, and say this parameter would be an object, you could fill the object with a
's without exposing a
directly.
Just my .02$