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test: Remove string literals for strictEquals/notStrictEquals #22891
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Ref: #22849. In short: Some unit tests are using string literals to simply tell you a conclusion what's right/wrong BUT not tell you what actually values are. So it's necessary to print them out in the console.
danbev
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Sep 20, 2018
Trott
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thefourtheye
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lundibundi
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LGTM.
jasnell
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Sep 21, 2018
Resume Build: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/17364/ |
Landed in ee31c28, thanks for the PR! |
addaleax
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In short: Some unit tests are using string literals to simply tell you a conclusion what's right/wrong BUT not tell you what actually values are. So it's necessary to print them out in the console. Refs: #22849 PR-URL: #22891 Reviewed-By: Daniel Bevenius <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Sakthipriyan Vairamani <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Denys Otrishko <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
ghost
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RemovingStringLiteralErrors
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September 23, 2018 00:48
Thanks all for you help! |
targos
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Sep 23, 2018
In short: Some unit tests are using string literals to simply tell you a conclusion what's right/wrong BUT not tell you what actually values are. So it's necessary to print them out in the console. Refs: #22849 PR-URL: #22891 Reviewed-By: Daniel Bevenius <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Sakthipriyan Vairamani <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Denys Otrishko <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
This was referenced Oct 10, 2018
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Ref: #22849.
In short: Some unit tests are using string literals to simply tell you a
conclusion what's right/wrong BUT not tell you what actually values are.
So it's necessary to print them out in the console.
make -j4 test
(UNIX), orvcbuild test
(Windows) passes