README
Jest Sorted
Inspired by chai sorted and jest-extended. This packages extends jest.expect with 2 custom matchers, toBeSorted
and toBeSortedBy
Examples
expect([1, 2, 3]).toBeSorted();
expect([3, 2, 1]).toBeSorted({ descending: true });
expect([{ id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 }]).toBeSortedBy('id');
expect([{ count: '10' }, { count: '5' }]).toBeSortedBy('count', {
descending: true,
coerce: true,
});
Installation
With npm:
npm install --save-dev jest-sorted
With yarn:
yarn add -D jest-sorted
Setup
Jest >v24
Add jest-sorted
to your Jest setupFilesAfterEnv
configuration. See for help
For example, add the following to your package.json
at the root level. See configuring jest for more info.
"jest": {
"setupFilesAfterEnv": ["jest-sorted"]
}
Jest <v23
"jest": {
"setupTestFrameworkScriptFile": "jest-sorted"
}
If you are already using another test framework, like jest-chain, then you should create a test setup file and require
each of the frameworks you are using.
For example:
// ./testSetup.js
require('jest-sorted');
require('jest-chain');
require('any other test framework libraries you are using');
Then in your Jest config:
"jest": {
"setupTestFrameworkScriptFile": "./testSetup.js"
}
Typescript
- Coming soon...
Usage
toBeSorted
Passes if the array is sorted in ascending order.
expect([1, 2, 3]).toBeSorted();
options
The following options can be passed as an object to alter the assertions behaviour
- descending : boolean - Asserts the array is sorted in descending order. (Defaults to false)
expect([3, 2, 1]).toBeSorted({ descending: true });
- coerce : boolean - Coereces values to numbers before comparison. (Defaults to false) Note: consecutive NaN values after co-ercion are considered to be sorted
expect(['2', '12']).toBeSorted({ coerce: true });
- key : string - Will use the value from the passed key in an array of objects. (Used internally by the toBeSortedBy method)
expect([{ id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 }]).toBeSorted({ key: 'id' });
- strict : boolean - Fails the assertion if a passed key option does not exist in the object. (Defaults to true) Note: will use undefined for all missing keys and equal values are considered sorted.
expect([{ id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 }]).toBeSorted({
key: 'nothing',
strict: false,
});
compare : function - A custom function to use for comparison. (Default comparison is a simple greater / less than). In some cases you may want to check values are sorted by a different condition. The function will take 2 elements from the array (a,b) and should return:
- A negative number if a comes first.
- A positive number if b comes first.
- 0 if the values are sorted equally.
See the compareFunction of Array.prototype.sort for more info.
const doubleDigitsFirst = (a, b) => {
if (a >= 10 && b < 10) {
return -1;
}
if (b >= 10 && a < 10) {
return 1;
}
return 0;
};
expect([10, 20, 1, 2]).toBeSorted({
compare: doubleDigitsFirst,
});
toBeSortedBy
Passes if the array of objects is sorted in ascending order by the passed key. (Alias for toBeSorted({ key }))
expect([{ id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 }]).toBeSortedBy('id');
options
The following options can be passed as an object to alter the assertions behaviour
- descending : boolean - Asserts the array is sorted in descending order. (Defaults to false)
expect([{ id: 3 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 1 }]).toBeSortedBy('id', {
descending: true,
});
- coerce : boolean - Coereces values to numbers before comparison. (Defaults to false) Note: consecutive NaN values after co-ercion are considered to be sorted
expect([{ count: '2' }, { count: '12' }]).toBeSortedBy('count', {
coerce: true,
});
- strict : boolean - Fails the assertion if a passed key option does not exist in the object. (Defaults to true) Note: will use undefined for all missing keys and equal values are considered sorted.
expect([{ id: 3 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 1 }]).toBeSortedBy('nothing', {
strict: false,
});
compare : function - A custom function to use for comparison. (Default comparison is a simple greater / less than). In some cases you may want to check values are sorted by a different condition. The function will take 2 values from the specified keys (a,b) and should return:
- A negative number if a comes first.
- A positive number if b comes first.
- 0 if the values are sorted equally.
See the compareFunction of Array.prototype.sort for more info.
const doubleDigitsFirst = (a, b) => {
if (a >= 10 && b < 10) {
return -1;
}
if (b >= 10 && a < 10) {
return 1;
}
return 0;
};
expect([{ count: 10 }, { count: 20 }, { count: 1 }, { count: 2 }]).toBeSortedBy(
'count',
{
compare: doubleDigitsFirst,
}
);