samsam v1.3.0
samsam
Same same, but different
samsam is a collection of predicate and comparison functions useful for
identifiying the type of values and to compare values with varying degrees of
strictness.
samsam is a general-purpose library with no dependencies. It works in browsers
(including old and rowdy ones, like IE6) and Node. It will define itself as an
AMD module if you want it to (i.e. if there's a define function available).
samsam was originally extracted from the
referee <http://github.com/busterjs/referee/>_ assertion library, which
ships with the Buster.JS testing framework.
Predicate functions
isArguments(object)
Returns true if object is an arguments object, false otherwise.
isNegZero(value)
Returns true if value is -0.
isElement(object)
Returns true if object is a DOM element node. Unlike
Underscore.js/lodash, this function will return false if object is an
element-like object, i.e. a regular object with a nodeType property that
holds the value 1.
###isDate(object)
Returns true if the object is a Date, or date-like. Duck typing of date
objects work by checking that the object has a getTime function whose return
value equals the return value from the object's valueOf.
Comparison functions
###identical(x, y)
Strict equality check according to EcmaScript Harmony'segal`.
From the Harmony wiki:
An egal function simply makes available the internal
SameValuefunction from section 9.12 of the ES5 spec. If two values are egal, then they are not observably distinguishable.
identical returns true when === is true, except for -0 and
+0, where it returns false. Additionally, it returns true when
NaN is compared to itself.
deepEqual(obj1, obj2)
Deep equal comparison. Two values are "deep equal" if:
- They are identical
- They are both date objects representing the same time
- They are both arrays containing elements that are all deepEqual
- They are objects with the same set of properties, and each property
in
obj1is deepEqual to the corresponding property inobj2
match(object, matcher)
Partial equality check. Compares object with matcher according a wide set of
rules:
String matcher
In its simplest form, match performs a case insensitive substring match.
When the matcher is a string, object is converted to a string, and the
function returns true if the matcher is a case-insensitive substring of
object as a string.
samsam.match("Give me something", "Give"); //true
samsam.match("Give me something", "sumptn"); // false
samsam.match({ toString: function () { return "yeah"; } }, "Yeah!"); // trueThe last example is not symmetric. When the matcher is a string, the object
is coerced to a string - in this case using toString. Changing the order of
the arguments would cause the matcher to be an object, in which case different
rules apply (see below).
Boolean matcher
Performs a strict (i.e. ===) match with the object. So, only true
matches true, and only false matches false.
Regular expression matcher
When the matcher is a regular expression, the function will pass if
object.test(matcher) is true. match is written in a generic way, so
any object with a test method will be used as a matcher this way.
samsam.match("Give me something", /^[a-z\s]$/i); // true
samsam.match("Give me something", /[0-9]/); // false
samsam.match({ toString: function () { return "yeah!"; } }, /yeah/); // true
samsam.match(234, /[a-z]/); // falseNumber matcher
When the matcher is a number, the assertion will pass if object == matcher.
samsam.match("123", 123); // true
samsam.match("Give me something", 425); // false
samsam.match({ toString: function () { return "42"; } }, 42); // true
samsam.match(234, 1234); // falseFunction matcher
When the matcher is a function, it is called with object as its only
argument. match returns true if the function returns true. A strict
match is performed against the return value, so a boolean true is required,
truthy is not enough.
// true
samsam.match("123", function (exp) {
return exp == "123";
});
// false
samsam.match("Give me something", function () {
return "ok";
});
// true
samsam.match({
toString: function () {
return "42";
}
}, function () { return true; });
// false
samsam.match(234, function () {});Object matcher
As mentioned above, if an object matcher defines a test method, match
will return true if matcher.test(object) returns truthy.
If the matcher does not have a test method, a recursive match is performed. If
all properties of matcher matches corresponding properties in object,
match returns true. Note that the object matcher does not care if the
number of properties in the two objects are the same - only if all properties in
the matcher recursively matches ones in object.
// true
samsam.match("123", {
test: function (arg) {
return arg == 123;
}
});
// false
samsam.match({}, { prop: 42 });
// true
samsam.match({
name: "Chris",
profession: "Programmer"
}, {
name: "Chris"
});
// false
samsam.match(234, { name: "Chris" });DOM elements
match can be very helpful when comparing DOM elements, because it allows
you to compare several properties with one call:
var el = document.getElementById("myEl");
samsam.match(el, {
tagName: "h2",
className: "item",
innerHTML: "Howdy"
});Changelog
1.1.2 (11.12.2014)
- Fix for issue #359 -
assert.matchdoes not support objects withnullproperties` - Implementation of feature request #64 - assert.match and parentNode
1.1.1 (26.03.2014)
