Project Details
How will I complete this project?
Review the Feed Reader Testing Project Rubric
- [x] Take the JavaScript Testing course
- [x] Download the required project assets.
- [ ] Review the functionality of the application within your browser.
- [ ] Explore the application's HTML (./index.html), CSS (./css/style.css) and JavaScript (./js/app.js) to gain an understanding of how it works.
- [ ] Explore the Jasmine spec file in ./jasmine/spec/feedreader.js and review the Jasmine documentation.
- [ ] Edit the
llFeeds
variable in ./js/app.js to make the provided test fail and see how Jasmine visualizes this failure in your application. - [ ] Return the
allFeeds
variable to a passing state. - [ ] Write a test that loops through each feed in the
allFeeds
object and ensures it has a URL defined and that the URL is not empty. - [ ] Write a test that loops through each feed in the
allFeeds
object and ensures it has a name defined and that the name is not empty. - [ ] Write a new test suite named
"The menu"
. - [ ] Write a test that ensures the menu element is hidden by default. You'll have to analyze the HTML and the CSS to determine how we're performing the hiding/showing of the menu element.
- [ ] Write a test that ensures the menu changes visibility when the menu icon is clicked. This test should have two expectations: does the menu display when clicked and does it hide when clicked again.
- [ ] Write a test suite named
"Initial Entries"
. - [ ] Write a test that ensures when the
loadFeed
function is called and completes its work, there is at least a single.entry
element within the.feed
container. - [ ] Write a test suite named
"New Feed Selection"
. - [ ] Write a test that ensures when a new feed is loaded by the
loadFeed
function that the content actually changes. - [ ] No test should be dependent on the results of another.
- [ ] Callbacks should be used to ensure that feeds are loaded before they are tested.
- [ ] Implement error handling for undefined variables and out-of-bound array access.
When complete - all of your tests should pass.
Write a README file detailing all steps required to successfully run the application. If you have added additional tests (for Udacious Test Coverage), provide documentation for what these future features are and what the tests are checking for.