Jeff Williams dc75f6328b fix several tutorial-related issues (#222)
- Tutorial code allowed JSON files to have a .js extension, then tried
to parse all .js files as JSON. The code now only looks for JSON files
with a .json extension. This allows .js files and tutorials to live in
the same directory.
- Recent changes caused tutorials to be generated with the wrong
filename. This is now fixed.
2012-11-11 03:17:02 -08:00
..
2012-10-17 08:21:04 -07:00
2012-04-30 17:39:50 -07:00

Testing JSDoc 3

Running Tests

Running tests is easy. Just change your working directory to the jsdoc folder and run the following command on Windows:

jsdoc -T

Or on OS X, Linux, and other POSIX-compliant platforms:

./jsdoc -T

If you can't get the short-form commands to work, try invoking Java directly:

java -cp lib/js.jar org.mozilla.javascript.tools.shell.Main \
-modules node_modules -modules rhino_modules -modules . \
jsdoc.js -T

Writing Tests

Adding tests is pretty easy, too. You can write tests for JSDoc itself (to make sure tags and the parser, etc. are working properly), tests for plugins, and/or tests for templates.

JSDoc 3 uses Jasmine (https://github.com/pivotal/jasmine) as its testing framework. Take a look at that project's wiki for documentation on writing tests in general.

Tests for JSDoc

Take a look at the files in the test directory for many examples of writing tests for JSDoc itself. The test\fixtures directory hold fixtures for use in the tests, and the test\specs directory holds the tests themselves.

Tests for plugins

Tests for plugins are found in the plugins\test directory. Plugins containing tests that were installed with the Jakefile install task will be run automatically.

Tests for templates

TODO