// ...
import { skip } from 'qunit';
// ...
// simply change `test` to `skip` after importing `skip` from qunit
skip('when some test needs to be skipped', function(assert) {
})
// ...
assert.equal(this.$('.some-element').text().trim(), 'Some Expected Value');
// ...
…will does not trim out whitespace from carriage returns which is really easy to produce if you format your handlebars pleasantly.
The fix: use JQuery’s $.trim(...) function. The above changes to:
// for completeness, import Ember in your test
// ...
import Ember from 'ember';
// ...
assert.equal(Ember.$.trim(this.$('.some-element').text()), 'Some Expected Value');
// ...
# install the ember-sinon module
ember install ember-sinon
// import the sinon module
import sinon from 'sinon';
// create a test class variable that will hold your frozen clock
let CLOCK = null;
module('...', {
// after each test restore to the system clock
afterEach: function() {
if (CLOCK) {
CLOCK.restore();
}
},
beforeEach: function() {
// you could make it so that all of your tests use a fixed date & time
// CLOCK = sinon.useFakeTimers(new Date(2001, 8, 11).getTime());
}
})
test('when testing a fixed date', function(assert) {
// I prefer to define my frozen time in the test for readability
CLOCK = sinon.useFakeTimers(new Date(2001, 8, 11).getTime());
// ... write your time-sensitive test
// the frozen clock will be restored to system time after each test
})