Simple mocking library for JavaScript targeting TypeScript development. If you have used before a library like Moq then the syntax should look familiar, otherwise the examples below should hopefully provide enough information to get you started quickly.
- Strongly typed
- Auto complete/intellisense support
- Static and dynamic mocking
- Mock objects, classes (with arguments), constructor functions and interfaces
- Control mock behavior
- Record and replay expectations
- Auto sandbox global objects and types
- Support ECMAScript 5 and 6
- Support node.js and browser
npm install typemoq
Or add this NuGet dependency to your project:
PM> Install-Package typemoq
The distribution directory should contain:
- Compiled JavaScript:
typemoq.js
and its minified versiontypemoq-min.js
- TypeScript definitions:
typemoq.d.ts
npm install https://github.com/florinn/typemoq
import * as TypeMoq from "typemoq";
/// <reference path="./node_modules/typemoq/dist/typemoq.d.ts" />
TypeMoq = require("typemoq");
Include at the top of your script file:
/// <reference path="./node_modules/typemoq/dist/typemoq.d.ts" />
import * as TypeMoq from "typemoq";
TypeMoq requires some dependencies to run, so make sure to include them in your page before typemoq.js
:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/circular-json/build/circular-json"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/lodash"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/typemoq"></script>
Also in your tsconfig.json
you need to set the module target as UMD
:
"compilerOptions": {
...
"module": "UMD",
...
}
At this point you should have access in your script to a global variable named TypeMoq
.
After importing TypeMoq into your project, the following types should be available:
Type | Description |
---|---|
TypeMoq.Mock | Used for creating 'regular' mocks (see Create mocks and Setup mocks) |
TypeMoq.MockBehavior | Used to specify how the mock should act when no expectations are defined (see Control mock behavior) |
TypeMoq.It | Helper for matching arguments (see Setup mocks and Verify expectations) |
TypeMoq.Times | Helper for performing verification (see Verify expectations) |
TypeMoq.GlobalMock | Used to create 'global' mocks corresponding to global objects (see Create global mocks) |
TypeMoq.GlobalScope | Used to create an execution context that makes use of any specified 'global' mocks (see Auto sandbox global mocks) |
TypeMoq.MockException | Exception thrown internally containing debug info |
Static mocks can be created either from class types and constructor arguments or from existing objects, including function objects.
(method) TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<T>(targetConstructor?: {
new (...ctorArgs: any[]): T;
prototype: Object;
}, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior, shouldOverrideTarget?: boolean, ...targetConstructorArgs: any[]): TypeMoq.IMock<T>
(method) TypeMoq.Mock.ofType2<T>(targetConstructor: {
new (...ctorArgs: any[]): T;
prototype: Object;
}, targetConstructorArgs: any[], behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior, shouldOverrideTarget?: boolean): TypeMoq.IMock<T>
- targetConstructor - target constructor type
- ...targetConstructorArgs - target constructor args
- behavior - mock behavior (see Control mock behavior)
- shouldOverrideTarget - override target properties (see Override target properties)
Note: During the creation of the static mock, the target object is being instantiated as a regular JavaScript object by executing the target constructor with any provided constructor args
Examples:
interface IBar {
value: string;
anyValue: any;
}
class Bar implements IBar {
value: string = '';
anyValue: any = undefined;
}
class Foo {
constructor(private _bar: IBar) { this._bar = _bar || new Bar(); }
get bar(): IBar { return this._bar; }
do(stringValue: string) { return 'Foo.do:' + stringValue; }
setBar(value: string) { this._bar.value = value; }
}
class GenericFoo<T> {
private _bar: T;
constructor(barCtor?: { new (): T }, public numberValue?: number) {
this._bar = new barCtor();
}
get bar(): T { return this._bar; }
do(stringValue: string) { return 'GenericFoo.do:' + stringValue + ': ' + this._bar.toString(); }
}
// Using class as constructor parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Bar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Bar);
// Using class as constructor parameter and casting result to interface
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<IBar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Bar);
// Using interface as type variable and class as constructor parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<IBar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<IBar>(Bar);
// Using class as constructor parameter and constructor arguments
const bar = new Bar();
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Foo> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Foo, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Loose, bar);
// Using a generic class as constructor parameter and constructor arguments
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<GenericFoo<Bar>> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(GenericFoo, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Loose, Bar, 999);
(method) TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance<T>(
targetInstance: T, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior, shouldOverrideTarget?: boolean): TypeMoq.IMock<T>
- targetInstance - target object
- behavior - mock behavior (see Control mock behavior)
- shouldOverrideTarget - override target properties (see Override target properties)
Note: To create the static mock, the provided target object is replaced by a deep clone which is accesible through the .target
property of the resulting mock object
Examples:
function someFunc() {
return "someFunc was called";
}
function someFuncWithArgs(a: any, b: any, c: any) {
return "someFuncWithArgs was called";
}
// From an existing object
const bar = new Bar();
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Bar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(bar);
// Or from function objects
const mock1: TypeMoq.IMock<() => string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFunc);
const mock2: TypeMoq.IMock<(a: any, b: any, c: any)=>string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFuncWithArgs);
Important: Dynamic mocking requires the runtime (browser or node.js) to support the Proxy
global object added in ECMAScript 6. If Proxy
is not detected, TypeMoq is going to throw a MockException.
A dynamic mock is created by specifying just a type parameter and some optional args:
(method) TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<T>(targetConstructor?: {
new (...ctorArgs: any[]): T;
prototype: Object;
}, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior, shouldOverrideTarget?: boolean): TypeMoq.IMock<T>
- targetConstructor - always
undefined
for dynamic mocks - behavior - mock behavior (see Control mock behavior)
- shouldOverrideTarget - override target properties (see Override target properties)
Note: While creating the dynamic mock, the target object is not instantiated by executing the constructor of the provided type parameter
The following type parameters are supported:
Function
(as the type of a function object)
// Using Function as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Function> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<Function>();
- a class type
// Using the 'instance' side of the class as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Bar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<Bar>();
// Specifying mock behavior
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<Foo> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<Foo>(undefined, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Loose);
- a constructor function
// Using the 'static' side of the class as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<typeof Bar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<typeof Bar>();
- an interface type
// Using an interface as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<IBar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<IBar>();
As opposed to static mocks, dynamic mocks have some limitations:
- No partial mocking
- No embedded mocks passed as constructor arguments
- Properties return by default a
function
object and notundefined
interface IThing {
getA(a: string): string;
getB(b: number): number;
getC(): boolean;
valueA: string;
}
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<IThing> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<IThing>();
expect(mock.object.getA("abc")).to.be.undefined;
expect(mock.object.getB(123)).to.be.undefined;
expect(mock.object.getC()).to.be.undefined;
expect(mock.object.valueA).to.be.a("function");
As a workaround you may set the property to return undefined
:
mock.setup(x => x.valueA).returns(() => undefined);
expect(mock.object.valueA).to.be.undefined;
This limitation also impacts the scenario where a mocked object is passed to Promise.resolve
. To be able to handle such scenario, the mocked object must be set as a thenable (i.e. has a "then" method) by returning undefined
or another value:
mock.setup((x: any) => x.then).returns(() => undefined);
Promise.resolve(mock.object)
.then(x => {
expect(x).eql(mock.object);
});
Mocks (created in any of the ways listed above) have the type IMock<T>
and expose a couple important properties:
(property) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.object: T
- the actual mock object (that has the same type T as the class or object being mocked)(property) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.target: T
- the underlying object being mocked
Mocks allow to match functions, methods and properties and setup return callbacks or exceptions to throw.
(method) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.setup<TResult>(
expression: (x: T) => TResult): TypeMoq.MethodCallReturn<T, TResult>
setup
accepts a function (also referred as 'matcher') taking as input argument the type being mocked and as body the value/property/method (with arguments if that's the case) to match.
Matcher | Description |
---|---|
TypeMoq.It.isValue<T>(x: T) |
Performs deep comparison against the provided object or basic value |
TypeMoq.It.isObjectWith<T>(x: Object) |
Performs partial deep comparison against the provided object |
TypeMoq.It.isAny() |
Matches any type |
TypeMoq.It.isAnyObject<T>(x: Ctor<T>) |
Matches any object compatible with the provided type |
TypeMoq.It.isAnyString() |
Matches any string |
TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber() |
Matches any number |
TypeMoq.It.is<T>(predicate: IFunc2<T, boolean>) |
Performs comparison using the provided predicate |
If no matcher is specified then an implicit matcher is considered that performs strict equality deep comparison, equivalent to TypeMoq.It.is(x => _.isEqual(x, a))
.
// Match a no args function
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<() => string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFunc);
mock.setup(x => x()).returns(() => "At vero eos et accusamus");
// Match a function with args
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<(a: any, b: any, c: any) => string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFuncWithArgs);
mock.setup(x => x(TypeMoq.It.isAny(), TypeMoq.It.isAny(), TypeMoq.It.isAny())).returns(() => "At vero eos et accusamus");
class Doer {
doVoid(): void { }
doNumber(n?: number): number { return n || 101; }
doString(s?: string): string { return s || 'xyz'; }
doObject(o?: Object): Object { return o || new Object(); }
doBar(b?: Bar): Bar { return b; }
}
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer);
// Match a no args method
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber());
// Match a method with explicit number value params
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(TypeMoq.It.isValue(321)));
// Match a method with implicit number value params
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(321));
// Match a method with explicit string value params
mock.setup(x => x.doString(TypeMoq.It.isValue("abc")));
// Match a method with implicit string value params
mock.setup(x => x.doString("abc"));
// Match a method with object value params
const bar = new Bar();
mock.setup(x => x.doObject(TypeMoq.It.isAnyObject(Bar)));
// Match a method with implicit object value params
const anObject = {};
mock.setup(x => x(anObject)).returns(() => 123);
expect(mock.object(anObject)).to.eq(123);
// Match a method with any string params
mock.setup(x => x.doString(TypeMoq.It.isAnyString()));
// Match a method with any number params
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber()));
// Match a method with any interface/class params
mock.setup(x => x.doBar(TypeMoq.It.isAnyObject(Bar)));
// Match a method by a param predicate
const bar1 = new Bar();
bar1.value = "Ut enim ad minim veniam";
const bar2 = new Bar();
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer);
mock.setup(x => x.doBar(TypeMoq.It.is((x: Bar) => x.value === "Ut enim ad minim veniam"))).returns(() => bar2);
To be able to match the static methods of some class, you would need to create a dynamic mock of the type of the class itself. E.g.
class Greeter {
private static _instance: Greeter | null;
static instance(): Greeter {
if (!this._instance) {
this._instance = new Greeter();
}
return this._instance;
}
greet(): string {
return 'Hello';
}
}
const greeter = Greeter.instance();
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<typeof Greeter> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<typeof Greeter>();
mock.setup(x => x.instance()).returns(() => greeter);
expect(mock.object.instance()).to.eq(greeter);
class FooWithPublicGetterAndSetter {
private _foo: string;
public get foo(): string { return this._foo; }
public set foo(value: string) { this._foo = value; }
}
// Match a property getter
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(FooWithPublicGetterAndSetter);
mock.setup(x => x.foo);
// Match a property setter
mock.object.foo = "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet";
mock.verify(x => x.foo = TypeMoq.It.isValue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet"), Times.atLeastOnce());
To be able to match a property make sure the property is initialized. Otherwise the TypeScript compiler will omit the uninitialized property from the emitted JavaScript and hence TypeMoq will throw a MockException with an 'invalid setup expression' message.
class Baz {
value: string = '';
anyValue: any;
}
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Baz);
mock.setup(x => x.value); // OK
mock.setup(x => x.anyValue); // throws MockException - invalid setup expression
interface Baz {
bar: string
jaz: number
}
class FooWithObjectArgMethod {
private _foo: Object
public foo(value: Object): void { }
}
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(FooWithObjectArgMethod);
// Match object deeply
mock.setup(x => x.foo(TypeMoq.It.isValue({ bar: 'hello', jaz: 42 })));
// Match object partially
mock.setup(x => x.foo(TypeMoq.It.isObjectWith({ jaz: 42 })));
For the predicate based matcher, TypeMoq.It.is<T>(predicate: IFunc2<T, boolean>)
, the argument of the predicate is a deep clone of the target argument, thus for doing object equality comparison, ===
should be replaced by _.isEqual
.
interface BeanParams {
colour: string
}
interface Service {
getBeans(params: BeanParams): string;
}
const service = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType<Service>();
const beanParams: BeanParams = { colour: 'red' };
// Wrong way of doing strict object comparison
service.setup(x => x.getBeans(TypeMoq.It.is<BeanParams>(x => x === beanParams))).returns(() => 'success');
expect(service.object.getBeans(beanParams)).to.not.eq('success');
// Right way of doing strict object comparison
service.setup(x => x.getBeans(TypeMoq.It.is<BeanParams>(x => _.isEqual(x, beanParams)))).returns(() => 'success');
service.setup(x => x.getBeans(beanParams)).returns(() => 'success'); // Short form equivalent to the explicit form above
expect(service.object.getBeans(beanParams)).to.eq('success');
(method) TypeMoq.IReturns<T, TResult>.returns(
valueFunction: (...x: any[]) => TResult): TypeMoq.IReturnsResult<T>
The callback attached to .returns
has the same signature as the matching function/method.
Also the callback gets called with the arguments passed to the matching function/method and it must have the same return type, making possible the following:
mock.setup(x => x.doString("abc")).returns((s: string) => s.toUpperCase());
(method) TypeMoq.IThrows.throws<T extends Error>(exception: T): TypeMoq.IThrowsResult
Example:
mock.setup(...).throws(new CustomException());
(method) TypeMoq.ICallback<T, TResult>.callback(
action: () => void): TypeMoq.IReturnsThrows<T, TResult>
(method) TypeMoq.ICallback<T, TResult>.callback(
action: (x: T) => void): TypeMoq.IReturnsThrows<T, TResult>
Attached callbacks are called before the .returns
callback or .throws
get called, and they have similar signature and behavior to .returns
callbacks.
Examples:
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer);
let called1, called2 = false;
let numberArg: number;
mock.setup(x => x.doString(TypeMoq.It.isAnyString())).callback(() => called1 = true).returns(s => s.toUpperCase());
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber())).callback(n => { numberArg = n; called2 = true; }).returns(n => n + 1);
Mocks allow to "record" and "replay" one or more setups for the same matching function, method or property.
- If a single setup is recorded then at replay it is always executed:
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(() => -1);
// record
mock.setup(x => x()).returns(() => 0);
// replay
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(0);
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(0);
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(0);
- If more setups are recorded then at replay they are executed in the order of registration:
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(() => -1);
// record
mock.setup(x => x()).returns(() => 0);
mock.setup(x => x()).returns(() => 1);
mock.setup(x => x()).returns(() => 2);
// replay
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(0);
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(1);
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(2);
expect(mock.object()).to.eq(undefined);
In the latter case, when there are no more recorded setups left to play, the mock starts returning default values or raises MockException if MockBehavior.Strict
(see Control mock behavior).
(method) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.reset(): void
Calling .reset()
on a mock returns the mock to its initial state by removing any previous setups.
At mock creation, use the optional behavior
argument with value:
MockBehavior.Loose
(default) - never throws when no corresponding setup is found and just returns default valuesMockBehavior.Strict
- raises exceptions for anything that doesn't have a corresponding setup
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Strict);
(property) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.callBase: boolean
When the mock property callBase
is set to true
, if there's no overriding setup the mock invokes the object being mocked.
mock.callBase = true;
The default value of callBase
is false
, so by default when there's no overriding setup the mock returns undefined
.
At mock creation, use the optional shouldOverrideTarget
argument with value:
true
(default) - mock setups are going to be applied to the target objectfalse
- mock setups are not going to be applied to the target object
To be able to use the target object inside .returns
, you need to choose not to override the target properties:
const targetInstance = {
n: 100,
getValue() {
return this.n;
},
setValue(n) {
this.n = n;
}
};
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(targetInstance, undefined, false);
mock.setup(x => x.getValue()).returns(() => mock.target.getValue());
expect(mock.object.getValue()).equal(100);
(method) TypeMoq.IVerifies.verifiable(times?: TypeMoq.Times): void
Expectations can be verified either one by one or all at once by marking matchers as verifiable.
Expectation | Description |
---|---|
TypeMoq.Times.exactly(n: number) |
Called exactly n times |
TypeMoq.Times.never() |
Never called |
TypeMoq.Times.once() |
Called once |
TypeMoq.Times.atLeast(n: number) |
Called at least n times |
TypeMoq.Times.atMost(n: number) |
Called at most n times |
TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce() |
Called at least once (default value) |
TypeMoq.Times.atMostOnce() |
Called at most once |
(method) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.verify<TResult>(
expression: (x: T) => TResult, times: TypeMoq.Times): void
To verify an expectation you can use the verify
method and specify a matching function and an expectation.
Examples:
// Verify that a no args function was called at least once
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<() => string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFunc);
mock.object();
mock.verify(x => x(), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
// Verify that a function with args was called at least once
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<(a: any, b: any, c: any) => string> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance(someFuncWithArgs);
mock.object(1, 2, 3);
mock.verify(x => x(TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber(), TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber(), TypeMoq.It.isAnyNumber()), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
// Verify that no args method was called at least once
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer);
mock.object.doVoid();
mock.verify(x => x.doVoid(), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
// Verify that method with params was called at least once
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer);
mock.object.doString("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
mock.verify(x => x.doString(TypeMoq.It.isValue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet")), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
// Verify that value getter was called at least once
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Bar);
mock.object.value;
mock.verify(x => x.value, TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
// Verify that value setter was called at least once
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Bar);
mock.object.value = "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet";
mock.verify(x => x.value = TypeMoq.It.isValue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet"), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
Note:
- When constructing a mock, it is allowed to pass mock objects as arguments and later verify expectations on them. E.g.:
const mockBar = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Bar);
const mockFoo = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Foo, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Loose, mockBar.object);
mockFoo.callBase = true;
mockFoo.object.setBar("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
mockBar.verify(x => x.value = TypeMoq.It.isValue("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet"), TypeMoq.Times.atLeastOnce());
- For static mocks, TypeMoq is able to verify any inner calls inside regular functions but not inside lambda ones. E.g.:
class FooBar {
register(): void {
this.canExecute();
}
registerLambda = () => {
this.canExecute();
}
canExecute(): void {
console.log("FooBar.canExecute() was called");
}
}
const mock: TypeMoq.IMock<FooBar> = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(FooBar);
mock.callBase = true;
mock.object.register();
mock.object.registerLambda(); // Function calls cannot be verified inside a lambda
mock.verify(x => x.canExecute(), TypeMoq.Times.once());
(method) TypeMoq.IMock<T>.verifyAll(): void
Instead of verifying one expectation at a time, you may specify the expectation at setup time by calling verifiable(times: TypeMoq.Times)
and then verifyAll()
to check all expectations.
The default value of the times
parameter is equal to TypeMoq.Times.once()
.
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(999)).verifiable(); // implicitly TypeMoq.Times.once()
mock.setup(x => x.doString(TypeMoq.It.isAny())).verifiable(TypeMoq.Times.exactly(2));
mock.setup(x => x.doVoid()).verifiable(TypeMoq.Times.atMostOnce());
mock.object.doVoid();
mock.object.doString("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
mock.object.doString("Ut enim ad minim veniam");
mock.object.doNumber(999);
mock.verifyAll();
When mock behavior is TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Strict
, every call to .setup()
automatically calls .verifiable()
behind the scenes, as the default.
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofType(Doer, TypeMoq.MockBehavior.Strict);
mock.setup(x => x.doNumber(999)); // implicitly TypeMoq.Times.once()
mock.setup(x => x.doVoid()).verifiable(TypeMoq.Times.atMostOnce());
mock.object.doVoid();
mock.object.doNumber(999);
mock.verifyAll();
Expectation invocation order | Description |
---|---|
TypeMoq.ExpectedCallType.InAnyOrder |
Only call count considered (default value) |
TypeMoq.ExpectedCallType.InSequence |
Both call count and order considered |
const mock = TypeMoq.Mock.ofInstance((x: number) => { });
mock.setup(x => x(1)).verifiable(TypeMoq.Times.once(), TypeMoq.ExpectedCallType.InSequence);
mock.setup(x => x(2)).verifiable(TypeMoq.Times.once(), TypeMoq.ExpectedCallType.InSequence);
mock.object(2);
mock.object(1);
mock.verifyAll(); // it should throw MockException
Static global mocks are created by specifying a class type or an existing object, similar to regular static mocks.
You may also specify a container object for the type/object being mocked.
For browsers the top global object is the window
object, which is the default container
value in TypeMoq.GlobalMock
.
For node.js the top global object is the global
object.
(method) TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType<T>(targetConstructor: {
new (): T;
prototype: Object;
}, container?: Object, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior): TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<T>
Due to browser security limitations, global mocks created by specifying class type cannot have constructor arguments.
Examples:
// global scope
interface IGlobalBar {
value: string;
}
class GlobalBar implements IGlobalBar {
value: string = '';
}
// Create an instance using class as ctor parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<GlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType(GlobalBar, global);
// Create an instance using class as ctor parameter and casting result to interface
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<IGlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType(GlobalBar, global);
// Create an instance using interface as type variable and class as ctor parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<IGlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType<IGlobalBar>(GlobalBar, global);
// Create an instance of 'XmlHttpRequest' global type
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType(XMLHttpRequest, global);
(method) TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance<T>(
targetInstance: T, globalName?: string, container?: Object, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior): TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<T>
When creating mock instances out of global objects (such as window.localStorage
), you should provide the name of the global object ("localStorage" in this case) as the second parameter.
Examples:
// Create an instance using class as ctor parameter and ctor args
const bar = new Bar();
const foo = new Foo(bar);
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<Foo> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(foo);
// Create an instance using a generic class as ctor parameter and ctor args
const foo = new GenericFoo(Bar);
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<GenericFoo<Bar>> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(foo);
// Create an instance from an existing object
const bar = new GlobalBar();
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<GlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(bar);
// Create an instance from a function object
const mock1: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<() => string> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(someGlobalFunc);
const mock2: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<(a: any, b: any, c: any) => string> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(someGlobalFuncWithArgs);
// Create an instance from 'window.localStorage' global object
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(localStorage, "localStorage");
(method) TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType2<T>(
globalName: string, container?: Object, behavior?: TypeMoq.MockBehavior): TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<T>
Dynamic global mocks are created by specifying a type parameter and the name of the global object as the first constructor argument.
// Create an instance using a class as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<GlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType2<GlobalBar>("GlobalBar", global);
// Create an instance using an interface as type parameter
const mock: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<IGlobalBar> = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType2<IGlobalBar>("IGlobalBar", global);
// Create an instance of 'XmlHttpRequest' global type
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType2<XMLHttpRequest>("XMLHttpRequest", global);
Compared to static global mocks, dynamic global mocks suffer from the same limitations as regular dynamic mocks.
(method) TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(
...args: TypeMoq.IGlobalMock<any>[]): TypeMoq.IUsingResult
(method) TypeMoq.IUsingResult.with(action: () => void): void
Replacing and restoring global class types and objects is done automagically by combining global mocks with global scopes.
Examples:
// global scope
function someGlobalFunc() {
return "someGlobalFunc was called";
}
function someGlobalFuncWithArgs(a: any, b: any, c: any) {
return "someGlobalFuncWithArgs was called";
}
// Global no args function is auto sandboxed
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(someGlobalFunc);
TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(mock).with(() => {
someGlobalFunc();
someGlobalFunc();
});
// Global function with args is auto sandboxed
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(someGlobalFuncWithArgs);
TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(mock).with(() => {
someGlobalFuncWithArgs(1,2,3);
someGlobalFuncWithArgs("1","2","3");
someGlobalFuncWithArgs(1, 2, 3);
);
// Global object is auto sandboxed
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType(GlobalBar);
TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(mock).with(() => {
const bar1 = new GlobalBar();
bar1.value;
bar1.value;
});
// 'window.XmlHttpRequest' global object is auto sandboxed
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofType(XMLHttpRequest);
TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(mock).with(() => {
const xhr1 = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr1.open("GET", "http://www.typescriptlang.org", true);
xhr1.send();
mock.verify(x => x.send(), TypeMoq.Times.exactly(1));
});
const xhr2 = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr2.open("GET", "http://www.typescriptlang.org", true);
xhr2.send();
mock.verify(x => x.send(), TypeMoq.Times.exactly(1));
// 'window.localStorage' global object is auto sandboxed
const mock = TypeMoq.GlobalMock.ofInstance(localStorage, "localStorage");
mock.setup(x => x.getItem(TypeMoq.It.isAnyString())).returns((key: string) => "[]");
TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using(mock).with(() => {
expect(localStorage.getItem("xyz")).to.eq("[]");
});
localStorage.setItem("xyz", "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
expect(localStorage.getItem("xyz")).to.eq("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
Note:
Inside the scope of a TypeMoq.GlobalScope, when constructing objects from global functions/class types which are being replaced by mocks, the constructor always returns the mocked object (of corresponding type) passed in as argument to the TypeMoq.GlobalScope.using
function