This is a unit test project using [munit](https://github.com/massiveinteractive/MassiveUnit). It's good practice to add tests for fixed bugs or new features.
TODO Make sure the unit tests are automatically run on GitHub Actions.
There's a 1:1 mapping between `.hx` files in `source/` and the unit test project - tests for `funkin.Conductor` go into `funkin.ConductorTest` etc.
### Building
Run one of the `test-*.hxml` files in this directory to run the tests on that specific target, e.g. `haxe test-cpp.hxml`. Currently supported are:
-`web` (HTML5)
-`cpp` (Native)
Alternatively, this can be done from within Visual Studio Code - (`F1` -> `Tasks: Run Task` -> Choose the target to test).
#### Adding Tests
- Run `haxelib run munit create com.FooBarTest -for com.Foo`
- Use `@:allow(full.package.name.ClassName)` to allow a test class to call private functions.
- Use `mockatoo.Mockatoo.mock(ClassName)` to mock a class. See [Mockatoo docs](https://github.com/misprintt/mockatoo).
#### Functions
-`@Before` functions are named `before()`
- Each `@Test` function starts with `test` and describes what exactly it tests. This can lead to long function names like `FlxEmitter#testStartShouldNotReviveMembers()` and serves as self-documentation.
- Another thing that helps with self-documentation is adding a comment for tests that are related an issue on GitHub.
```haxe
@Test // #1203
function testColorWithAlphaComparison()
```
### `FunkinTest` base class
Test classes extend `FunkinTest`, which is a base class with some utility functions for testing.
### `step()`
`step()` advances the `FlxGame` exactly one step. This is useful for tests that depend on game time advancing / `FlxGame#step()` being executed, such as physics of `add()`ed objects, state switches, or just time passing for tweens or timers.
There are two parameters:
-`steps` - specifies the amount of steps to advance (defaults to 1)
-`callback` - an optional callback function that is executed after each step
### `testDestroy()`
`testDestroy()` tests whether an `IFlxDestroyable` can safely be `destroy()`ed more than once (null reference errors are fairly common here). For this, `destroyable` has to be set during `before()` of the test class.