Check out FuncUnit. It combines selenium, qunit, envjs, and a jQuery like API to make testing your apps pretty darn easy. It's is also much better than selenium at accurately simulating user events.
On Apr 27, 1:15 am, mckoss <[email protected]> wrote: > QUnit is used by the jQuery project, I've had good luck with it and > it's fairly simple to write tests. It can be made to run pretty > easily in both the browser environment and under node.js. I find it > invaluable to maintain a reasonably sized > test suite for any non-trivial code I write (especially for any code > you expect could be used as a library by another project or > developer). > > Here's an example of the tests for my namespace.js project running on > QUnit in the browser: > > http://namespace-js.pageforest.com/test/test-runner.html > > The source is all here (including a code coverage extension I wrote > for QUnit): > > https://github.com/mckoss/namespace/tree/master/test > > I'd love to learn to use Selenium or PhontomJS to do more UI-based > integration tests, I just haven't had time to incorporate these into > my testing regimen. > > http://docs.jquery.com/Qunit > http://seleniumhq.org/ > http://www.phantomjs.org/ > > - Mike > > On Apr 20, 8:34 am, Andrés Maneiro <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Has someone experiences doing TDD with javascript? I'm interested in hearing > > from real experiences. Also references to good videos or lectures will be > > valuable. > > > best, > > amaneiro -- To view archived discussions from the original JSMentors Mailman list: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ To search via a non-Google archive, visit here: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]
