Mocha / Chai expect.to.throw not catching thrown errors
Solution 1:
You have to pass a function to expect
. Like this:
expect(model.get.bind(model, 'z')).to.throw('Property does not exist in model schema.');
expect(model.get.bind(model, 'z')).to.throw(new Error('Property does not exist in model schema.'));
The way you are doing it, you are passing to expect
the result of calling model.get('z')
. But to test whether something is thrown, you have to pass a function to expect
, which expect
will call itself. The bind
method used above creates a new function which when called will call model.get
with this
set to the value of model
and the first argument set to 'z'
.
A good explanation of bind
can be found here.
Solution 2:
As this answer says, you can also just wrap your code in an anonymous function like this:
expect(function(){
model.get('z');
}).to.throw('Property does not exist in model schema.');
Solution 3:
And if you are already using ES6/ES2015 then you can also use an arrow function. It is basically the same as using a normal anonymous function but shorter.
expect(() => model.get('z')).to.throw('Property does not exist in model schema.');
Solution 4:
This question has many, many duplicates, including questions not mentioning the Chai assertion library. Here are the basics collected together:
The assertion must call the function, instead of it evaluating immediately.
assert.throws(x.y.z);
// FAIL. x.y.z throws an exception, which immediately exits the
// enclosing block, so assert.throw() not called.
assert.throws(()=>x.y.z);
// assert.throw() is called with a function, which only throws
// when assert.throw executes the function.
assert.throws(function () { x.y.z });
// if you cannot use ES6 at work
function badReference() { x.y.z }; assert.throws(badReference);
// for the verbose
assert.throws(()=>model.get(z));
// the specific example given.
homegrownAssertThrows(model.get, z);
// a style common in Python, but not in JavaScript
You can check for specific errors using any assertion library:
Node
assert.throws(() => x.y.z);
assert.throws(() => x.y.z, ReferenceError);
assert.throws(() => x.y.z, ReferenceError, /is not defined/);
assert.throws(() => x.y.z, /is not defined/);
assert.doesNotThrow(() => 42);
assert.throws(() => x.y.z, Error);
assert.throws(() => model.get.z, /Property does not exist in model schema./)
Should
should.throws(() => x.y.z);
should.throws(() => x.y.z, ReferenceError);
should.throws(() => x.y.z, ReferenceError, /is not defined/);
should.throws(() => x.y.z, /is not defined/);
should.doesNotThrow(() => 42);
should.throws(() => x.y.z, Error);
should.throws(() => model.get.z, /Property does not exist in model schema./)
Chai Expect
expect(() => x.y.z).to.throw();
expect(() => x.y.z).to.throw(ReferenceError);
expect(() => x.y.z).to.throw(ReferenceError, /is not defined/);
expect(() => x.y.z).to.throw(/is not defined/);
expect(() => 42).not.to.throw();
expect(() => x.y.z).to.throw(Error);
expect(() => model.get.z).to.throw(/Property does not exist in model schema./);
You must handle exceptions that 'escape' the test
it('should handle escaped errors', function () {
try {
expect(() => x.y.z).not.to.throw(RangeError);
} catch (err) {
expect(err).to.be.a(ReferenceError);
}
});
This can look confusing at first. Like riding a bike, it just 'clicks' forever once it clicks.