| name | clean-typescript-tests |
| description | Use when writing, fixing, editing, or refactoring TypeScript tests, especially slow or flaky tests, skipped or focused tests, happy-path-only coverage, missing boundaries, brittle fixtures, coverage gaps, or multi-concept tests. |
Clean Tests
T1: Insufficient Tests
Test everything that could possibly break. Use coverage tools as a guide, not a goal.
test("divide", () => {
expect(divide(10, 2)).toBe(5);
});
test("divide normal", () => {
expect(divide(10, 2)).toBe(5);
});
test("divide by zero", () => {
expect(() => divide(10, 0)).toThrow(RangeError);
});
test("divide negative", () => {
expect(divide(-10, 2)).toBe(-5);
});
T2: Use a Coverage Tool
Coverage tools report gaps in your testing strategy. Don't ignore them.
vitest run --coverage
T3: Don't Skip Trivial Tests
Trivial tests document behavior and catch regressions. They're worth more than their cost.
test("user default role", () => {
const user = new User("Alice");
expect(user.role).toBe("member");
});
T4: An Ignored Test Is a Question About an Ambiguity
Don't use test.skip to hide problems. Either fix the test or delete it.
test.skip("async operation", () => {
});
test.skip("cache invalidation - requires Redis (see CONTRIBUTING.md)", () => {
});
T5: Test Boundary Conditions
Bugs congregate at boundaries. Test them explicitly.
test("pagination boundaries", () => {
const items = Array.from({ length: 100 }, (_, i) => i);
expect(paginate(items, 1, 10)).toEqual(items.slice(0, 10));
expect(paginate(items, 10, 10)).toEqual(items.slice(90, 100));
expect(paginate(items, 11, 10)).toEqual([]);
expect(() => paginate(items, 0, 10)).toThrow(RangeError);
expect(paginate([], 1, 10)).toEqual([]);
});
T6: Exhaustively Test Near Bugs
When you find a bug, write tests for all similar cases. Bugs cluster.
test("month boundaries", () => {
expect(lastDayOfMonth(2024, 1)).toBe(31);
expect(lastDayOfMonth(2024, 2)).toBe(29);
expect(lastDayOfMonth(2023, 2)).toBe(28);
expect(lastDayOfMonth(2024, 4)).toBe(30);
expect(lastDayOfMonth(2024, 12)).toBe(31);
});
T7: Patterns of Failure Are Revealing
When tests fail, look for patterns. They often point to deeper issues.
T8: Test Coverage Patterns Can Be Revealing
Look at which code paths are untested. Often they reveal design problems.
T9: Tests Should Be Fast Enough To Run
Slow tests don't get run. Keep unit tests fast and isolate slower integration tests so developers can run the right feedback loop intentionally.
test("user creation", async () => {
const db = await connectToDatabase();
const user = await db.createUser("Alice");
expect(user.name).toBe("Alice");
});
test("user creation", async () => {
const db = new InMemoryDatabase();
const user = await db.createUser("Alice");
expect(user.name).toBe("Alice");
});
T10: Prefer Test Data Builders
Use test data builders or small factory helpers when setup objects are large, repeated, or full of irrelevant fields. Builders keep tests focused on the one fact that matters and reduce as assertions around incomplete fixtures.
const order: Order = {
id: "order-1",
status: "paid",
customerId: "customer-1",
lineItems: [],
discounts: [],
createdAt: new Date("2026-01-01"),
};
const order = buildOrder({ status: "paid" });
Inline literals are fine when the shape is tiny and every field matters to the assertion. Avoid broad builders that hide important setup or create invalid domain objects by default.
T11: Test Behavior Contracts, Not Incidental Implementation
Tests should fail when behavior breaks, not when harmless implementation choices change. Assert public outputs, state transitions, side effects at boundaries, interactions, and other observable outcomes. Avoid tests that only lock in private helper calls, intermediate data shape, algorithm steps, ordering of internal operations, or other details that can change without changing the contract.
Implementation-detail assertions are appropriate only when the detail is the contract, protects against a real bug, or covers a boundary where there is no better observable signal.
Test Organization
F.I.R.S.T. Principles
- Fast: Tests should run quickly
- Independent: Tests shouldn't depend on each other
- Repeatable: Same result every time, any environment
- Self-Validating: Pass or fail, no manual inspection
- Timely: Written before or with the code, not after
One Concept Per Test
Multiple assertions are acceptable when they verify one behavior. Split the test when assertions describe different concepts, state transitions, or responsibilities.
test("user", () => {
const user = new User("Alice", "alice@example.com");
expect(user.name).toBe("Alice");
expect(user.email).toBe("alice@example.com");
expect(user.isValid()).toBe(true);
user.activate();
expect(user.isActive).toBe(true);
});
test("user stores name", () => {
const user = new User("Alice", "alice@example.com");
expect(user.name).toBe("Alice");
});
test("user stores email", () => {
const user = new User("Alice", "alice@example.com");
expect(user.email).toBe("alice@example.com");
});
test("new user is valid", () => {
const user = new User("Alice", "alice@example.com");
expect(user.isValid()).toBe(true);
});
test("user can be activated", () => {
const user = new User("Alice", "alice@example.com");
user.activate();
expect(user.isActive).toBe(true);
});