Panel

Justin Searls (twitter github blog)
Jamison Dance (twitter github blog)
Joe Eames (twitter github blog)
Merrick Christensen (twitter github)
AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog)
Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code)

Discussion

01:33 - Justin Searls

Test Double

02:14 - Jasmine

Pivotal Labs

03:42 - Testing JavaScript

05:29 - CoffeeScript

07:22 - What Jasmine is

Unit testing library
RSpec
DOM agnostic

10:16 - Testing the DOM

14:01 - Tragedy of the commons

factory_girl

18:29 - Testing

23:53 - Syntax in Jasmine

26:23 - RSpec and Jasmine

28:07 - Async support in Jasmine

32:18 - Spies

mockito
Conditional stubbing
jasmine-stealth
jasmine-fixture

37:30 - jasmine-given

Cucumber

43:19 - Running Jasmine

jasminerice

jasmine-rails

jasmine-headless-webkit

Testacular

testem

49:17 - tryjasmine.com

Picks

Running MongoDB on AWS (Jamison)
The Clean Coder by Robert C. Martin (Joe)
Squire.js (Joe and Merrick)
Rdio app (Merrick)
Square (AJ)
Allrecipes.com (AJ)
Jenkins CI (Chuck)
Apple’s Podcast app (Chuck)
lineman (Justin)
StarTalk Radio Show with Neil Degrasse Tyson (Justin)
To The Moon PC Game (Justin)

Transcript

JAMISON:  Holy cow!

JOE:  That was not annoying.

CHUCK:  What’s not annoying?

MERRICK:  He is punching a bag of Fritos?

JOE:  Yeah.

[Laughter]

CHUCK:  Well, I was closing it up so they don’t get stale as fast.

JOE:  You’re very thorough. Those are going to be the least stale…

MERRICK:  Do you have like a Frito resealer or something?

[Laughter]

[Shrill sound]

CHUCK:  Okay, sealed.

[This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.]

[Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at Bluebox.net.]

CHUCK:  Hey everybody, and welcome to Episode 38 of the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Jamison Dance.

JAMISON:  Hi guys!

CHUCK:  Joe Eames.

JOE:  Howdy?

CHUCK:  Merrick Christensen.

MERRICK:  What’s up?

CHUCK:  AJ O’Neal is trying to join the call. He’s here.

AJ:  Yo! Yo! Yo! Coming at you live from the Rental Agreement sphere of Provo, Utah.

MERRICK:  He lives!

CHUCK:  I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.tv. And this week, we have a special guest. That’s Justin Searls.

JUSTIN:  Hello.

CHUCK:  So, why don’t you tell us a little bit about yourself, Justin?

JUSTIN:  Okay. Well, now that I’m on the spot, my name is Justin. I’m a software developer. I live in Columbus, Ohio. About a year ago, me and a guy named Todd Kaufman started a new company called Test Double. Previously, he and I had been doing consulting for a long, long time. And we’re up to eight people now. And we have a good time building software with an emphasis on terrific interaction design which has resulted in us kind of developing a specialty for well-crafted frontend code, predominantly JavaScript. And I imagine that’s probably why I’m here today.

CHUCK:  Awesome. Alright. Well, we brought you on to talk about Jasmine. Jasmine was written by, was it Pivotal Labs? 

JUSTIN:  Yeah, Pivotal Labs guys. A guy names Christian Williams who I think has since moved on to Square, and D.W. Frank who’s still at Pivotal. They wrote the core library and me and a whole bunch of other people in the community have piled on with different runners and add-ons and extensions in the sort of like little ecosystem of the 25 people who write unit tests for JavaScript.

CHUCK:  All 25 of you, huh?

JUSTIN:  Well, it’s not a lot, right? It’s been a fun journey of being one of the very few people who really, really got excited or chose to get excited about making it easier for folks to write tests in JavaScript or as easy as it would be for whatever servers and language they’d be using.

Special Guest: Justin Searls.

Guests