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DART Cookbook

You're reading from   DART Cookbook Over 110 incredibly effective, useful, and hands-on recipes to design Dart web client and server applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783989621
Length 346 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Ivo Balbaert Ivo Balbaert
Author Profile Icon Ivo Balbaert
Ivo Balbaert
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Working with Dart Tools FREE CHAPTER 2. Structuring, Testing, and Deploying an Application 3. Working with Data Types 4. Object Orientation 5. Handling Web Applications 6. Working with Files and Streams 7. Working with Web Servers 8. Working with Futures, Tasks, and Isolates 9. Working with Databases 10. Polymer Dart Recipes 11. Working with Angular Dart Index

Microtesting your code with assert


Writing tests for your app is necessary, but it is not productive to spend much time on trivial tests. An often underestimated Dart keyword is assert, which can be used to test conditions in your code.

How to do it...

Look at the code file microtest.dart, where microtest is an internal package as seen in the previous recipe:

import 'package:microtest/microtest.dart';

void main() {
 Person p1 = new Person("Jim Greenfield", 178, 86.0);
 print('${p1.name} weighs ${p1.weight}' );
 // lots of other code and method calls
 // p1 = null;
 // working again with p1:
 assert(p1 is Person); 
 p1.weight = 100.0;
 print('${p1.name} now weighs ${p1.weight}' );
} 

We import the microtest library, which contains the definition of the Person class. In main(), we create a Person object p1, go through lots of code, and then want to work with p1 again, possibly in a different method of another class. How do we know that p1 still references a Person object? In the previous snippet...

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