Book Image

AngularJS Test-driven Development

By : Tim Chaplin
Book Image

AngularJS Test-driven Development

By: Tim Chaplin

Overview of this book

<p>Starting with reviewing the test-driven development (TDD) life cycle, you will learn how Karma and Protractor make your life easier while running JavaScript unit tests. You will learn how Protractor is different from Selenium and how to test it entirely. This book is a walk-through to using TDD to build an AngularJS application containing a controller, model, and scope.</p> <p>Building on the initial foundational aspects, you will expand to include testing for multiple controllers, partial views, location references, CSS, and the HTML element. In addition, you will explore using a headless browser with Karma. You will also configure Karma file watching to automate testing and tackle components of AngularJS (controller, service, model, and broadcasting) using TDD. At the end of this book, you will extend explore how to pull data using an external API, setting up and configuring Protractor to use a standalone Selenium server, and setting up Travis CI and Karma to test your application.</p> <p>This book is a complete guide to testing techniques using Karma for unit testing and performing end-to-end testing with Protractor.</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
AngularJS Test-driven Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Self-test questions


Q1. A callback function refers to a function that is called after an asynchronous function completes.

  1. True

  2. False

Q2. An XMLHttpRequest cannot send or receive JSON.

  1. True

  2. False

Q3. REST stands for:

  1. Representational State Transfer

  2. Nothing

  3. Repeatable Endpoint State Transfer

Q4. Asynchronous functions always complete in the order in which they were called.

  1. True

  2. False

Q5. There are two different implementations of $httpBackend: one for unit and one for end-to-end testing.

  1. True

  2. False