Usage in Deno
import * as mod from "node:assert";
The node:assert
module provides a set of assertion functions for verifying
invariants.
Indicates the failure of an assertion. All errors thrown by the node:assert
module will be instances of the AssertionError
class.
This feature is deprecated and will be removed in a future version.
Please consider using alternatives such as the mock
helper function.
An alias of ok.
Strict assertion mode
Tests for deep equality between the actual
and expected
parameters.
"Deep" equality means that the enumerable "own" properties of child objects
are recursively evaluated also by the following rules.
Expects the string
input not to match the regular expression.
Awaits the asyncFn
promise or, if asyncFn
is a function, immediately
calls the function and awaits the returned promise to complete. It will then
check that the promise is not rejected.
Asserts that the function fn
does not throw an error.
Strict assertion mode
Throws an AssertionError
with the provided error message or a default
error message. If the message
parameter is an instance of an Error
then
it will be thrown instead of the AssertionError
.
Throws value
if value
is not undefined
or null
. This is useful when
testing the error
argument in callbacks. The stack trace contains all frames
from the error passed to ifError()
including the potential new frames forifError()
itself.
Expects the string
input to match the regular expression.
Strict assertion mode
Tests for deep strict inequality. Opposite of deepStrictEqual.
Strict assertion mode
Tests strict inequality between the actual
and expected
parameters as
determined by Object.is()
.
Tests if value
is truthy. It is equivalent toassert.equal(!!value, true, message)
.
Awaits the asyncFn
promise or, if asyncFn
is a function, immediately
calls the function and awaits the returned promise to complete. It will then
check that the promise is rejected.
Tests strict equality between the actual
and expected
parameters as
determined by Object.is()
.
Expects the function fn
to throw an error.
In strict assertion mode, non-strict methods behave like their corresponding strict methods. For example, deepEqual will behave like deepStrictEqual.