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brut-js

Utility Custom Elements and JS for BrutRB

This provides utility custom elements for use in a BrutRB-powered app, as well as a rudimentary testing system for testing custom elements.

Install

npm install brut-js

If you want to write tests for custom elements, you must also install JSDOM and Mocha:

npm install --save-dev jsdom mocha

Using Custom Elements

The simplest way is to import them all and define them:

import { BrutCustomElements } from "brut-js"
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", () => {
  BrutCustomElements.define()
})

See the jsdocs for what elements are available.

Testing of Custom Elements

This library contains rudimentary support for testing custom elements using jsdom. It attempts to use the elements as they would in a real browser, and your tests and assertions should interact with the elements using the DOM and not directly.

A simple example is the test for BrutAutosubmit/<brut-automsubmit>, which enables any form element to automatically submit the form it's a part of:

<form>
  <brut-autosubmit>
    <input type="text">
  </brut-autosubmit>
  <button>Submit</button>
</form>

When the <input> above dispatches a "change" event, the <form> is submitted. You can see in the test file that each test locates the form and the input, dispatches an event from that input, then checks to see if the form was submitted, all using the browser's APIs.

Testing Your Custom Elements

  1. Set up Mocha

    npm install --save-dev mocha
    
  2. Create a location for your tests:

    mkdir specs/js # can be anything
    
  3. Create a tautoloigical test to ensure your setup is working:

    // specs/js/canary.spec.js
    import { withHTML } from "../src/testing/index.js"
    describe("<my-custom-element>", () => {
      withHTML(`
        <my-custom-element>OK</my-custom-element>
      `).test("Tests work", ({document,assert}) => {
         const element = document.querySelector("my-custom-element")
         assert.equal(element.textContent,"OK")
      })
    })
    
  4. Run mocha:

    npx mocha specs/js --extension spec.js --recursive
    

Development

  1. Install Docker

  2. Set up your dev environment:

    dx/build
    
  3. Start the dev environment

    dx/start
    
  4. In another terminal, set everything up

    dx/exec bin/setup
    
  5. Run all tests

    dx/exec bin/ci
    
  6. Run a single test

    dx/exec npm run bundle
    dx/exec npm run test:one specs/File.spec.js
    

Remember to run npm run bundle any time you change files in src, as the tests bring in the code via a bundle produced by that task.