dongfeng-pay/jhboss/static/lib/bootstrap-datetimepicker/tests/README.md

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2019-12-19 14:47:58 +08:00
Unit tests, written with [QUnit](http://docs.jquery.com/QUnit), are used to
expose bugs for squashing, prevent bugs from respawning, and suppress new
bugs when adding new features and making changes.
# Running the tests
The simplest way to run the tests is to open `tests/tests.html` in your browser.
The test suites will automatically run themselves and present their results.
To run the tests from the command line, download and install
[PhantomJS](http://phantomjs.org/), and run `run-qunit.js` with it:
$ cd tests/
$ phantomjs run-qunit.js tests.html
Failed tests and their failed assertions will be printed to the console. A
results summary will be printed at the end.
To generate coverage statistics, use [JSCoverage](http://siliconforks.com/jscoverage/)
to instrument the js files:
$ cd tests/
$ jscoverage ../js/ ../instrumented/
$ phantomjs run-qunit.js tests.html
Coverage percentage will be included in the output summary, and a highlighted
line-by-line html file will be generated.
# Shout-out
Thanks to Rod @ While One Fork for the
[CIS guide](http://whileonefork.blogspot.com/2011/10/integrating-javascript-tests-into-cli.html)
on putting the above together.
# Adding tests
Tests go in js files in the `tests/suites/` directory tree. QUnit organizes
tests into suites called "modules"; there is one module per js file. If the
tests you are adding do not fit into an existing module, create a new one at
`tests/suites/<new module>.js`, where `<new module>` is a broad yet
descriptive name for the suite. If tests have many year-specific cases (ie,
behave differently in leap years vs normal years, or have specific buggy
behavior in a certain year), create the module in a new directory,
`tests/suites/<new module>/<year>.js`, where `<new module>` is the decriptive
name and `<year>` is the four-digit year the tests pertain to.
In order for new tests to be run, they must be imported into `tests/tests.html`.
Find the script includes headed by the html comment `<!-- Test suites -->`, and
add a new one to the list which includes the new js files.
# Can I use this?
By all means, please do! Just note that I stopped working on this structure
once it fit my needs, there's no real support for it, and it may change in the
future. Otherwise, have at it.