Book Image

Angular 2 Cookbook

By : Patrick Gillespie, Matthew Frisbie
Book Image

Angular 2 Cookbook

By: Patrick Gillespie, Matthew Frisbie

Overview of this book

Angular 2 introduces an entirely new way to build applications. It wholly embraces all the newest concepts that are built into the next generation of browsers, and it cuts away all the fat and bloat from Angular 1. This book plunges directly into the heart of all the most important Angular 2 concepts for you to conquer. In addition to covering all the Angular 2 fundamentals, such as components, forms, and services, it demonstrates how the framework embraces a range of new web technologies such as ES6 and TypeScript syntax, Promises, Observables, and Web Workers, among many others. This book covers all the most complicated Angular concepts and at the same time introduces the best practices with which to wield these powerful tools. It also covers in detail all the concepts you'll need to get you building applications faster. Oft-neglected topics such as testing and performance optimization are widely covered as well. A developer that reads through all the content in this book will have a broad and deep understanding of all the major topics in the Angular 2 universe.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Angular 2 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Writing a minimum viable end-to-end test suite for a simple application


End-to-end testing (or e2e for short) is on the other end of the spectrum as far as unit testing is concerned. The entire application exists as a black box, and the only controls at your disposal—for these tests—are actions the user might take inside the browser, such as firing click events or navigating to a page. Similarly, the correctness of tests is only verified by inspecting the state of the browser and the DOM itself.

More explicitly, an end-to-end test will (in some form) start up an actual instance of your application (or a subset of it), navigate to it in an actual browser, do stuff to a page, and look to see what happens on the page. It's pretty much as close as you are going to get to having an actual person sit down and use your application.

In this recipe, you'll put together a very basic end-to-end test suite so that you might better understand the concepts involved.

Note

The code, links, and a live example...