neovim/test/functional/example_spec.lua
2024-04-10 15:53:50 +01:00

74 lines
2.0 KiB
Lua

-- To run this test:
-- TEST_FILE=test/functional/example_spec.lua make functionaltest
local t = require('test.functional.testutil')()
local Screen = require('test.functional.ui.screen')
local clear = t.clear
local command = t.command
local eq = t.eq
local feed = t.feed
describe('example', function()
local screen
before_each(function()
clear()
screen = Screen.new(20, 5)
screen:attach()
screen:set_default_attr_ids({
[0] = { bold = true, foreground = Screen.colors.Blue },
[1] = { bold = true, foreground = Screen.colors.Brown },
})
end)
it('screen test', function()
-- Do some stuff.
feed('iline1<cr>line2<esc>')
-- For debugging only: prints the current screen.
-- screen:snapshot_util()
-- Assert the expected state.
screen:expect([[
line1 |
line^2 |
{0:~ }|
{0:~ }|
|
]])
end)
it('override UI event-handler', function()
-- Example: override the "tabline_update" UI event handler.
--
-- screen.lua defines default handlers for UI events, but tests
-- may sometimes want to override a handler.
-- The UI must declare that it wants to handle the UI events.
-- For this example, we enable `ext_tabline`:
screen:detach()
screen = Screen.new(25, 5)
screen:attach({ rgb = true, ext_tabline = true })
-- From ":help ui" we find that `tabline_update` receives `curtab` and
-- `tabs` objects. So we declare the UI handler like this:
local event_tabs, event_curtab
function screen:_handle_tabline_update(curtab, tabs)
event_curtab, event_tabs = curtab, tabs
end
-- Create a tabpage...
command('tabedit foo')
-- Use screen:expect{condition=…} to check the result.
screen:expect {
condition = function()
eq(2, event_curtab)
eq({
{ tab = 1, name = '[No Name]' },
{ tab = 2, name = 'foo' },
}, event_tabs)
end,
}
end)
end)