Convert tabs to spaces.

This commit is contained in:
Christian Williams 2010-02-20 14:08:45 -05:00
parent b12605274d
commit 8679090bf3
1 changed files with 32 additions and 32 deletions

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@ -8,10 +8,10 @@ Quick Start
### Ruby Suite Running
sudo gem sources -a http://gems.github.com
sudo gem install geminstaller
sudo gem install geminstaller
git clone git://github.com/pivotal/jasmine.git
cd jasmine
sudo geminstaller
sudo geminstaller
cd examples/ruby
rake jasmine_server
@ -20,12 +20,12 @@ open `http://localhost:8888/` in your favorite browser.
### HTML Suite Running
[Get the latest release from the downloads page](http://github.com/pivotal/jasmine/downloads)
open `example/example_runner.html` in your favorite browser
open `example/example_runner.html` in your favorite browser
### Automatic Suite Running (w/ Selenium)
sudo gem sources -a http://gems.github.com
sudo gem install geminstaller
sudo gem install geminstaller
git clone git://github.com/pivotal/jasmine.git
cd jasmine
sudo geminstaller
@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ Exciting changes are afoot and many syntax changes have been made to make Jasmin
Each spec is, naturally, a JavaScript function. You tell Jasmine about this spec with a call to `it()` with a string and the function. The string is a description that will be helpful to you when reading a report.
it('should be a test', function () {
var foo = 0
var foo = 0
foo++;
});
@ -122,10 +122,10 @@ Jasmine has several built-in matchers. Here are a few:
A Matcher has a method name, takes an expected value as it's only parameter, has access to the actual value in this, and then makes a call to this.report with true/false with a failure message. Here's the definition of `toEqual()`:
jasmine.Matchers.prototype.toEqual = function (expected) {
return this.report((this.actual === expected),
'Expected ' + expected + ' but got ' + this.actual + '.');
};
jasmine.Matchers.prototype.toEqual = function (expected) {
return this.report((this.actual === expected),
'Expected ' + expected + ' but got ' + this.actual + '.');
};
Feel free to define your own matcher as needed in your code. If you'd like to add Matchers to Jasmine, please write tests.
@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ multiple `runs()` blocks in a spec will run serially. For example,
`runs()` blocks exist so you can test asynchronous processes. The function `waits()` works with `runs()` to provide a naive
timeout before the next block is run. You supply a time to wait before the next `runs()` function is executed. For example:
it('should be a test', function () {
it('should be a test', function () {
runs(function () {
this.foo = 0;
var that = this;
@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ timeout before the next block is run. You supply a time to wait before the next
runs(function () {
this.expects(this.foo).toEqual(1);
});
});
});
What's happening here?
@ -231,33 +231,33 @@ What's happening here?
Specs are grouped in Suites. Suites are defined using the global `describe()` function:
describe('One suite', function () {
it('has a test', function () {
...
});
describe('One suite', function () {
it('has a test', function () {
...
});
it('has another test', function () {
...
});
});
it('has another test', function () {
...
});
});
The Suite name is so that reporting is more descriptive.
Suites are executed in the order in which `describe()` calls are made, usually in the order in which their script files are included. Additionally, specs within a suite share a functional scope. So you may declare variables inside a describe block and they are accessible from within your specs. For example:
describe('A suite with some variables', function () {
describe('A suite with some variables', function () {
var bar = 0
it('has a test', function () {
bar++;
expect(bar).toEqual(1);
});
it('has another test', function () {
bar++;
it('has a test', function () {
bar++;
expect(bar).toEqual(1);
});
it('has another test', function () {
bar++;
expect(bar).toEqual(2);
});
});
});
});
#### beforeEach
@ -353,13 +353,13 @@ Jasmine supports nested describes. An example:
var nestedSuiteBar;
beforeEach(function() {
nestedSuiteBar=1;
});
});
it('nested expectation', function () {
expect(suiteWideFoo).toEqual(0);
expect(nestedSuiteBar).toEqual(1);
});
});
it('top-level describe', function () {
@ -384,7 +384,7 @@ Here are a few examples:
var Klass.prototype.methodWithCallback = function (callback) {
return callback('foo');
};
...
it('should spy on Klass#method') {