This section provides an overview of what mocha is, and why a developer might want to use it.
It should also mention any large subjects within mocha, and link out to the related topics. Since the Documentation for mocha is new, you may need to create initial versions of those related topics.
You can install mocha
either globally or in your project folder. The latter is the preferred way.
In all the example let's assume that all the test files are in a test
folder within the project folder.
To install mocha
in your project folder, you can use the following npm
command:
$ cd my-project/folder
$ npm install mocha --save-dev
This command will install mocha
inside the node_modules
folder in your project and add a (development) dependency entry inside the package.json
file.
To use mocha
from the CLI you can either use the mocha
command inside the ./node_modules/.bin/
folder:
$ ./node_modules/.bin/mocha ./test
Or use a npm script
(a npm script
uses by default the commands in the .bin
folder).
# package.json
{
"name": "my-project",
"version": "0.0.1",
"description": "my first tested project",
"scripts": {
"start": "node app.js",
"test": "mocha ./test"
},
...
}
To call that script you can do now:
$ npm run test
Or simply (test
is a special script in npm
):
$ npm test
To use mocha
inside a webpage (just front-end), just include the mocha.js
file inside node_modules/mocha/mocha.js
inside your webpage:
## HTML page with tests
<script src="node_modules/mocha/mocha.js"></script>
For a global install use npm
as follow:
$ npm install mocha -g
This will install mocha
in your global environment and bind the mocha
command to your CLI., so you can call mocha
from the terminal in any place.
$ mocha ./test
var assert = require('assert');
describe('String', function() {
describe('#split', function() {
it('should return an array', function() {
assert(Array.isArray('a,b,c'.split(',')))
});
});
});