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odin-javascript-exercises/02_repeatString/solution/repeatString-solution.spec.js
T
Bhagyesh Pathak 598ab5c937 02_repeatString/solution - Line-32, replace "odin" with "hey"
As asked by @JoshDevHub in a discussion of a related PR, I made a similar change to this solution. In the earlier code, the comment description mentioned "hey" as a sample string but the code had "odin" string. This update addresses that tiny gap between sample comments and related code.

More on: https://github.com/TheOdinProject/javascript-exercises/pull/505#pullrequestreview-2588692590
2025-02-03 09:58:47 +05:30

40 lines
1.7 KiB
JavaScript

const repeatString = require('./repeatString-solution');
describe('repeatString', () => {
test('repeats the string', () => {
expect(repeatString('hey', 3)).toEqual('heyheyhey');
});
test('repeats the string many times', () => {
expect(repeatString('hello', 10)).toEqual('hellohellohellohellohellohellohellohellohellohello');
});
test('repeats the string 1 times', () => {
expect(repeatString('hi', 1)).toEqual('hi');
});
test('repeats the string 0 times', () => {
expect(repeatString('bye', 0)).toEqual('');
});
test('returns ERROR with negative numbers', () => {
expect(repeatString('goodbye', -1)).toEqual('ERROR');
});
test('repeats the string a random amount of times', function () {
/*The number is generated by using Math.random to get a value from between
0 to 1, when this is multiplied by 1000 and rounded down with Math.floor it
equals a number between 0 to 999 (this number will change everytime you run
the test).*/
// DO NOT use Math.floor(Math.random() * 1000) in your code,
// this test generates a random number, then passes it into your code with a function parameter.
// If this doesn't make sense, you should go read about functions here: https://www.theodinproject.com/paths/foundations/courses/foundations/lessons/fundamentals-part-3
const number = Math.floor(Math.random() * 1000);
/*The .match(/((hey))/g).length is a regex that will count the number of heys
in the result, which if your function works correctly will equal the number that
was randomly generated. */
expect(repeatString('hey', number).match(/((hey))/g).length).toEqual(
number
);
});
test('works with blank strings', () => {
expect(repeatString('', 10)).toEqual('');
});
});