omitWhen - Conditionally omit tests from a suite
In some cases, we need to wish to omit certain portions of our suite in a way that these tests won't run, and will not count against isValid
. For example, when we have some tests that are only allowed to run when a certain checkbox is checked by the user.
Generally, when we skip fields, they are counted against isValid
, meaning, unless specifically marked as optional
, the suite will not be regarded as valid. Using omitWhen
fixes it by both preventing the omitted tests from running, and allowing the suite to be valid even without them.
Differences from skipWhen
Unlike skipWhen
, tests omitted using omitWhen
are not counted against isValid
. Additionally, any validation message of an omitted test will be excluded from the suite result if the condition for the omitWhen
is true.
Params
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Conditional | boolean /function * | The conditional expression to be evaluated. When Truthy, the tests within omitWhen will be omitted. |
Body | function | A callback function containing the tests to either omit or run. |
* When using the function conditional, the function will be passed the current validation result as an argument, so it can be used to skip tests based on the current validation result.
Usage Example
import { create, test, enforce, omitWhen, only } from 'vest';
create((data = {}, currentField) => {
only(currentField);
test('username', 'username is required', () => {
enforce(data.username).isNotBlank();
});
omitWhen(data.useNewAddress, () => {
test('address_line_1', 'Address Line 1 is required', () => {
enforce(data.address_line_1).isNotBlank();
});
test('city', 'City is required', () => {
enforce(data.city).isNotBlank();
});
test('postal_code', 'Postal code is required', () => {
enforce(data.postal_code).isNotBlank();
});
});
});
omitWhen(
res => res.hasErrors('username'),
() => {
test('username', 'Username already exists', () => {
// this is an example for a server call
return doesUserExist(data.username);
});
}
);
omitWhen(
(value, values) => {
if (!values) {
return false;
}
return values.length === 1;
},
({ value, values, field }) => {
if (!values) {
return false;
}
if (values.length === 1 && values[0] === value) {
return true;
}
return false;
},
'You need at least one option',
);
The code within omitWhen will always run, regardless of whether the condition is met or not. omitWhen
only affects the validation result, but if you call a function within omitWhen
, it will run regardless of the condition.
omitWhen(true, () => {
console.log('This will always run');
});