The Javascript Jest testing framework documentation says that I need to add done()
in my callback to test an asynchronous function, as otherwise the function will return after the test completes and so the test will fail. I have Jest added to my package.json, and the following two files:
src.js:
function fetchData(cb) {
setTimeout(cb, 2000, 'peanut butter')
}
module.exports = fetchData
src.test.js:
const fetchData = require('./src')
test('the data is peanut butter', () => {
function callback(data) {
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter')
// no done() method!
}
fetchData(callback);
})
I get passing tests with the above code, but I think I should get a failing test since I don't have done()
in my test file. Is my fetchData()
method not asynchronous?
EDIT: Following Nicholas' answer, I changed the code to this:
src.js:
function fetchData(cb) {
setTimeout(cb, 2000, 'peanut')
}
module.exports = fetchData
src.test.js:
const fetchData = require('./src')
test('the data is peanut butter', () => {
function callback(data) {
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter')
done()
}
fetchData(callback);
})
The test runner should evaluate the expectation/assertion per the Jest documentation and fail (peanut being passed, peanut butter expected), but still shows a passing test.
Also, the Jest documentation says:
If done() is never called, the test will fail, which is what you want to happen
The test passes both with and without the done()
method in the callback, and both with and without a correct (peanut butter
) argument passed to the callback (i.e. all four variants pass).
done
as an argument the code is considered synchronous and doesn't wait. The test is considered succesful before your assertions get a chance to runsetTimeout()
)setTimeout
callback to expire before terminating the process. Try creating an empty file and put just asetTimeout
in it. You'll see that it won't exit the process until it firesdone
as an argument totest
.done
should be also passed as an argument, apart from also getting called when you're done with your test. Have a look at my example, run it and you'll get the point. Pay attention to line 8, where I passtest
as an argument