I'm finding it increasingly difficult to simulate actual user events using jQuery or native element trigger functions. For example, if you have a text input and you don't want the user to be able to add a character, you can call e.preventDefault()
with the jQuery-normalised event object on the keydown
event. However, there is no way to programatically verify this test scenario.
The following test passes even without the call to preventDefault
because the jQuery keydown trigger isn't a "real" event.
input.val('test').trigger(jQuery.Event({
which: 68
});
expect(input).toHaveValue('test');
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Without the correct code, this test should fail because the input should have a value of 'testd' (68 is the character code for 'd').
Does anyone know any methods or libraries to simulate real browser UI events?
Simulate real event is quite complicated. You must first determine which type of event you need and create it with document.createEvent
. Then call different init*Event
to initialize the event object. Finally, use element.dispatchEvent
to dispatch the event to the target object.
You probably want to try using Selenium: http://seleniumhq.org/
Here's a decent overview: http://blog.frontendforce.com/2010/05/unit-testing-in-javascript-selenium/
I believe YUI had some code to do that. Download their code and take a look. I believe it is called simulate.js
or something similar. Alternatively you can look at how selenium does it.
Here's a repo that seems to be kept quite well up to date: https://github.com/mmonteleone/jquery.autotype
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