This consolidates the few existing tests for options bags in Temporal
being of the wrong type, and adds them for every entry point in Temporal
that accepts an options bag.
These are mostly identical tests, but there is a variation for methods
like round() where either an options bag or string is accepted.
Add a consistent set of invalid strings for all of the
smallestunit-invalid-string.js and largestunit-invalid-string.js tests:
- "era" and "eraYear" in singular and plural
- all of the units that are disallowed for that particular method call, in
singular and plural
- an allowed unit with \0 at the end
- an allowed unit with an "i" replaced by a dotless i
- an allowed unit but with all-caps
- an unrelated string.
Of the toString() methods that have options for printing a time with
seconds and fractional seconds, PlainTime seems to have the most
comprehensive set of tests. Bring all the others (Duration, Instant,
PlainDateTime, and ZonedDateTime) in sync with PlainTime, and edit the
PlainTime ones where necessary to include improvements from the others.
Tests:
- fractionalseconddigits-invalid-string.js: copy and expand on
PlainTime's more comprehensive set of invalid strings. Add assertion
message. Fix front matter.
- fractionalseconddigits-non-integer.js: Fix front matter.
- fractionalseconddigits-out-of-range.js: make sure infinity is tested.
Add assertion messages. Fix front matter.
- fractionalseconddigits-undefined.js: copy PlainTime's more
comprehensive test with whole minutes, whole seconds, and subseconds.
Copy PlainTime's test of an empty function object. Add more
descriptive variable names and assertion messages. Fix front matter.
- fractionalseconddigits-wrong-type.js: inline and delete TemporalHelper
used here; it was only good for this test anyway. Improve assertion
messages.
- smallestunit-valid-units.js: copy PlainTime's test with a second value
with zero seconds even. Refactor repetitive tests into a loop. Copy
the invalid unit "era" from the Instant test. Add assertion messages.
A prior version of ECMA262 described invalid mathematical operations
with infinite values [1]. Update the test metadata to reflect the
corrected specification text, and add two assertions for the obsolete
conditions.
[1] ".bind on a function with infinite length has imprecise spec and
engine divergences"
https://github.com/tc39/ecma262/issues/2170
As originally written, this test would spuriously pass when the deleted
property was incorrectly visited by enumation but correctly removed from
the object. In such cases, the accumulator string would take the form
"aa1baundefinedca3"
And satisfy all conditions intended to highlight implementation errors.
Refactor the test to avoid false negative by using an object with a null
prototype and verifying the exact contents of the accumulator string.
As originally written, this test would spuriously pass when the deleted
property was incorrectly visited by enumation but correctly removed from
the object. In such cases, the accumulator string would take the form
"aa1baundefinedca3"
And satisfy all conditions intended to highlight implementation errors.
Refactor the test to avoid false negative by using an object with a null
prototype and verifying the exact contents of the accumulator string.
https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/pull/2003 is a normative change
that reached consensus at the March 2022 TC39 plenary meeting. This adds
tests that verify the new spec text is implemented correctly, performing
arithmetic on a PlainYearMonth instance that would previously have thrown
an error if it was implemented as written.
https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/pull/2090 is a normative change
that reached consensus at the March 2022 TC39 plenary meeting. This adds
tests that verify the change made to the formatting of years between 0 and
999 inclusive in all toString and toJSON methods of Temporal types that
can output an ISO year number in their return value.
(Philip, March 2022: This was originally Frank's PR #3057. I did some
reformatting, removed duplicate tests, addressed the review comments that
I left the first time around, and added some cases that I felt were not
yet complete.)
(Philip, March 2022: This was originally Frank's PR #3060. I did some
reformatting, removed a test that didn't exercise the whole feature, and
combined some duplicate tests with some existing tests.)
Where possible, observable calls originating from within Temporal, that
require an options argument, should pass `undefined` as that options
argument, rather than `{}` or `Object.create(null)`.
See tc39/proposal-temporal#1685.
I made a mistake with one of the signs in one of the time zones that we
use for verifying DST handling. Luckily this didn't affect any previously
existing tests, but it affected some new tests that I'm going to add in
the next commit.
How do I know that _this_ arithmetic is correct? I feel reasonably
confident with the added test.
The `.jshintrc` file configures the JavaScript "linting" tool named
JSHint. Test262 does not depend on that tool, making the file's purpose
and validity ambiguous and potentially distracting.
These tests check API entry points that convert strings to
Temporal.PlainDate, with a list of various strings that are all not valid
for that context according to ISO 8601.
I'd like to add basic functionality tests for string arguments, and these
tests are testing something more specific: that a Get of the "overflow"
property on the passed-in options object is observable. Rename
accordingly.