# Test.it > A minimalistic client-side testing library **Test.it** is a small client-side testing library for people that want to live in code, not in tests. No over engineering here. Inspired by the simplicity of libraries like [Jasmine](https://jasmine.github.io/), but implementation ideas based on [TinyTest](https://github.com/joewalnes/jstinytest) This is probally not a *cure-all* testing solution, if you want something more robust checkout [Jasmine](https://jasmine.github.io/), [Tape](https://github.com/substack/tape) or [Mocha](https://mochajs.org/) -- this is to... **Test small things, with small things** ### Features - Designed for the Browser - *Under* a 100 lines - Single File - No Dependicies - 2kb footprint (*before gzip*) - Extend with custom reporters - Uses Simple Assert **No Bloat Here!** - [Download Here](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/n2geoff/testit/master/src/testit.js) - [Or Minified Version Here](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/n2geoff/testit/master/src/testit.min.js) ## Usage By default, you can run your tests like ```js import test from 'testit'; test.it({ 'my passing test': function() { test.assert(true); }, 'my failing test': function() { test.assert(true === false, 'just wanted to fail fast'); } }).run(); ``` > NOTE: `run()` can be called elsewhere, see [tests/](test/run.html) by default, your test results are logged to the console ``` +OK my passing test -ERR my failing test --- Error: just wanted to fail fast ...error stack... --- # tests 2 pass 1 fail 1 ``` A `+OK` will proceed test lines that *pass* and a `-ERR` for those that *fail*, An error stack is included by default after the failing test wrapped in `---`. You can suppress outputing the error stack by passing `false` as an argument to `run()`, ie `run(false)`. You can, also, write your own custom test runner... ### Custom Test Runners `test.it` `.run()` method provides an optional `next` function parameter that passes the results as an `object` for you to process *however* you like. For Example... **For Fans of [TinyTest](https://github.com/joewalnes/jstinytest)** ```js test.it({ 'my passing test': function() { test.assert(true); } }, function(results) { if (window.document && document.body) { document.body.style.backgroundColor = ( results.fail.length ? '#ff9999' : '#99ff99' ); } }); ``` If using the optional `next` param will return results as JSON ```json { "pass": ["list of passed tests", "..."], "fail": ["list of errored tests", "..."], } ``` From this object you can easily find the number of tests ran `pass.length`, number of failed tests `fail.length` or the total test count by adding the two. Simple. > REMEMBER: you can bypass error output too A sample test runner is provided for the **BROWSER** in the `test/` directory; `index.html` and `runner.js` respectfully, with the spec in `index.spec.js`. ## Methods To stay minimal, `test.it` only has 3 core functions: - `it` to capture your tests - `run` to execute yours tests - and `assert` to write your assertions While you can use your own assertion library, the included `assert` evaluates an expression/condition tests: if you want to shorten test typing try let assert = test.assert; putting that above your tests will allow you to write like ```js test.it({ "my test should work": function() { assert(true); } }); ``` ## TODO - provide sample test runner for CI environments - maybe spec files export results && runner identifies failure ## Support Please open [an issue](https://github.com/n2geoff/testit/issues/new) for support. ## Contributing Anyone is welcome to contribute, however, if you decide to get involved, please take a moment to review the [guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md), they're minimalistic;) ## License [MIT](LICENSE) Geoff Doty