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Apr 12th 2019, 14:54 |
neon1024 |
Hash is a good shout though @josbeir :ok_hand: |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:54 |
slackebot |
<neon1024> |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:54 |
neon1024 |
Yeah, I went similar |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:45 |
josbeir |
@neon1024 $this->assertArrayHasKey('call.features', Hash::flatten(json_decode('{ "call": { "features": "" } }'))); :rolling_on_the_floor_laughing: |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:43 |
ricksaccous |
too bad we don't account for it in our budgets though |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:43 |
ricksaccous |
hehe |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:43 |
ricksaccous |
as of now the only one who has written a test is me and i just wanted to to be sure some of my logic was correct |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:43 |
ricksaccous |
if i head a project i might make people write some tests |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:42 |
ricksaccous |
hahaha |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:42 |
neon1024 |
Don’t worry, it took me three test suites to figure this stuff out! |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:42 |
neon1024 |
..and if you rebake your fixtures your test -case will fail |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:42 |
ricksaccous |
oh alright |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:42 |
neon1024 |
Which might be out of scope for your test-case |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
neon1024 |
As you’d be comparing all the keys in the response |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
neon1024 |
No, you can’t do that either |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
neon1024 |
You re-bake a fixture with imports, and your test suite will fail |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
ricksaccous |
lollll |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
ricksaccous |
you can just do array_keys or something on it and then compare the array of array_keys? |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
neon1024 |
Asserting values will suffer the same fate |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
ricksaccous |
oh |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:41 |
neon1024 |
No, you only want to assert the keys exist |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
neon1024 |
and regenerating all your json fixtures |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
ricksaccous |
comparing two php arrays is a lot easier |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
neon1024 |
Any schema change requires rebaking all your fixtures |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
ricksaccous |
yeah that makes sense |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
neon1024 |
Because it’s far too fragile |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
ricksaccous |
i am just thinking aloud as to why |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:40 |
ricksaccous |
yeah |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:39 |
ricksaccous |
actually trimming white space would ruin some stuff |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:39 |
neon1024 |
No, as I said, you don’t want to do that |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:39 |
neon1024 |
Well that’s what `$this->assertResponseContains()` can do for you, but it doesn’t understand nesting |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:39 |
ricksaccous |
you might be able to do assertEqual if you trim whitespace, not sure about that |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:38 |
ricksaccous |
hehe, yeah i suppose, json as arrays seem the easiest in php |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:38 |
neon1024 |
Even with fixtures |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:38 |
neon1024 |
But you don’t want to to `$this->assertEqual($response, $json)` as it’s too fragile |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:37 |
ricksaccous |
got it |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:37 |
neon1024 |
@ricksaccous I am refactoring the way we produce our json response, away from a horrible helper into using league/fractal. So I need to have test-cases to ensure that the refactor is producing the same results as the existing response |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:32 |
ricksaccous |
oh ok |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:32 |
neon1024 |
I am writing a test-case for my JSON web service. So neither of those |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:32 |
ricksaccous |
lol |
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Apr 12th 2019, 14:32 |
ricksaccous |
or just a raw json response? |