Notice how the test itself is still dead simple, but now the heavy lifting of mocking modules for RequireJS is done by external code, with its own tests.
(describe is equivalent to a test class in PHPUnit, and it is equivalent to a single method on that class, sort of)
Here's a scenario, you're stuck with code that does new MyClass everywhere
The previous developer (who was a genius, of course) developed this code over 7 days and 7 nights, and the entire company runs on it. The previous developer ended their employment under mysterious circumstances, which we will not discuss with you.
Your only option is, in almost all of your tests, to overload the autoloading system, and substitute your own fake classes in order to test anything.
How do you achieve that with PHPUnit?
This is more or less equivalent to my requirejs problem above
My suggestion is at the overloading level (you implement a different autoloader function, that takes mocks into account, and use that instead of the real one)
@Wes's suggestion is at pre-compilation level, you actually alter the code-under-test to include the mocks
(Which is more daring)
@Allenph That's not under question.
I'll make it simpler
I've given you the scenario @Allenph
You have an existing code, with no dependency injection, and globals everywhere
You need to add tests to it.
How do you do it? what tools or techniques would you use?
Wes gave another one, add pre-processing to your tests, and alter the code under test.
Another is, for example, to make a tiny refactor where the offending new gets put into a protected method, and you then create an extending class which overrides that method, and returns a mock instead.
Now you have some mock that gets reused all over the place, and you have a factory method for it.
Where do you put that factory method? With the way PHPUnit ks you have to have a new class that extends TestCase then your test class extends the new class to get access to that factory method.
Which is obviously going to get crappy fast. What I'm saying is your test class should just be a normal class. One thing should "route" through the tests, and the rest (the stuff that contains the current functionality of PHPUnit) should be injected into your test class.
class MockFactory {
public function createMock() {
// ...
}
}
class Test extends TestCase {
private $mockFactory;
private $mock;
public function setUpClass() {
$this->mockFactory = new MockFactory();
}
public function setUp() {
$this->mock = $this->mockFactory->create();
}
// snip
}
Who told you that everything in test code needed to be tests?
> [PHP Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 65536 bytes) in D:\Web\socket-inspect\vendor\phpunit\phpunit\src\Framework\MockObject\Invocation\StaticInvocation.php on line 79]
Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 65536 bytes) in D:\Web\socket-inspect\vendor\phpunit\phpunit\src\Framework\MockObject\Invocation\StaticInvocation.php on line 79
@bwoebi yeah I needed just the server side for something, but now I have that and I was thinking it would be much more useful to be able to proxy both sides :P
It doesn't happen if you do it twice by reference, or twice not by reference, or if you do it not by reference then by reference... only if you do it by reference and then not by reference.
Which would have to mean that the array is altered when not being passed by reference, which doesn't make any sense to me o.O
i miss one thing from netbeans, when you refactored wrong, it marked all files with errors in them in the project explorer window, without having to open them all or without running tests
So we have a relatively unique system, whereas some of the code is built and packaged, but part of the code is brought over by a special build process from the database (yes.), and is added to the code after it had already been minified
The built part of the code undergoes the normal build, lint, minify, etc. and the extra code from the database (which are hooks in the function to program fulfills) gets added after
@Alesana Normally, there wouldn't be a big problem
If the minification process were to happen after the hooks were added, the minifier would simply know not to use the i identifier, since it's taken at the global level, and unless it's safe to overshadow it, it shouldn't use it.
It's the combination of all of those horrible practices that caused it
Right that's why I wouldn't put too much thought into it
See the weird part though is that I somehow knew that when using for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {} in JS, i would be accessible outside of the loop. I just thought that it wasn't that way with PHP for some reason
I don't use much JS though, mostly just for building a static website and some AJAX calls
And then of course for some parralax, lazyload, or navbar effects that I should probably just be using a premade library for :P
It's frustrating at my job because before I came there, nobody knew what they were doing at all. So I came to a bunch of horribly written most wobbly code in the world. Naturally, they're getting errors all of the time that I would go in and manage to fix. Then they realized that I could actually code, so they started to take on more complicated projects and giving them to me.
I'm definitely more on the junior side though - so just because I can do what they want doesn't mean I'm doing it right. Especially when they need it done by the next day
@Allenph Well that wasn't what the conversation was about, but in the past I did have code in a DB. I let users define JS that would be ran once their "action" was completed. It sat in a DB.
@Sean I want something I can use webpack with, as well as Sass and Pug. I couldn't find any originally with Pug but I could most likely implement that without a problem
Refute the claim: You don't need secure password requirements if you have a lockout system that will lock someones account after 5 attempts, preventing brute force and dictionary attacks.