Reputation: 392
I'm trying to run Jasmine client integration tests on a meteor project. I'm using meteor 0.9.4
, and the sanjo:jasmine
package for Jasmine.
I have written a test which looks like:
describe("Template.dashboard.tasks", function() {
it("ela displays correct assessment", function() {
Session.set("selected_subject", "math");
Session.set('selected_grade', "1");
tasks = Template.dashboard.tasks();
expect(true).toBe(true);
});
});
I get an error before it can get to the end of the test:
Cannot read property 'tasks' of undefined
This means that Template.dashboard
does not exist within the scope of this test.
Template.dashboard.tasks()
is a helper function which works completely, and it is in a js
file within a view folder. Regular Jasmine
tests work as expected, but as soon as I try to use one of my own functions from another file, it doesn't work.
My question is: Is there something I need to do to give the Jasmine
test access to my template helper functions?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1152
Reputation: 392
In Meteor, Template helper functions used to be formatted like this:
Template.dashboard.tasks = function () {
...
};
But that has been deprecated, and the new format is:
Template.dashboard.helpers({
tasks: function(){
...
}
});
In Jasmine, with the previous formatting, you could access helper functions like:
Template.dashboard.tasks();
But now you must call helper functions like this:
Template.dashboard.__helpers[' tasks']();
Sanjo (the original author of the meteor-jasmine repo) suggested using a function like this to make it easier to call helper functions (especially if the syntax ends up getting changed again):
function callHelper(template, helperName, context = {}, args = []) {
template.__helpers[` ${helperName}`].apply(context, args);
}
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 4924
An updated answer to this question for Meteor 1.3 (sorry I use mocha, but it does not affect the answer):
Template.foo and Template.foo helpers won't be eagerly set up when testing, so you need to import foo.html
then foo.js
.
Here is an example :
import { Meteor } from 'meteor/meteor';
import { Template } from 'meteor/templating';
import { Foo } from '/collections/foo.js';
import { assert } from 'meteor/practicalmeteor:chai';
import './foo.html'; // now Template.foo is defined
import './foo.js'; // now Template.foo.__helpers[' bar'] is defined
describe('foo handlers', () => {
it("Should test bar", () => {
// don't forget the space, helper key is ' bar' not 'bar'
var bar = Template.foo.__helpers[' bar'].apply({foo:"bar"},3);
assert.Equal(bar,'bar');
});
});
Of course as said before, you should definitely encapsulate the weird Template.foo.__helpers[' bar'].apply(context,args)
into a nice, clean helper.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 84
tests on server part are running nicely from start, and there is indeed one more thing to do in order to run tests on the frontend part. I'll try to find you that.
In addition, consider reading or reading again the famous and explicit article from Dr. Llama's Blog related to Jasmin/Meteor : Bullet-proof Meteor applications with Velocity, Unit Testing, Integration Testing and Jasmine
Upvotes: 0