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A Dart testing utility for asserting that some code emits a compilation error.

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The expect_error package is a testing library inspired by Typescript's // @expect-error, designed to help package authors to test compilation errors.

Usage

expect_error exposes a compiles matcher, which can be used within unit tests.

A simple example would be:

// test/my_test.dart
import 'package:expect_error/expect_error.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';

void main() async {
  final library = await Library.parseFromStacktrace();

  test('String is not assignable to int', () async {
    await expectLater(library.withCode('''
// expect-error: INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
int value = "string";
'''), compiles);
  });
}

This example tests that the code:

int value = "string";

emits the compilation error "INVALID_ASSIGNMENT".

FAQ: Why use a comment in the code block instead of a matcher?

You may wonder why:

await expectLater(library.withCode('''
// expect-error: INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
int value = "string";
'''), compiles);

is preferrable to:

await expectLater(library.withCode('''
int value = "string";
'''), throwsCompilationError('INVALID_ASSIGNMENT'));

The reason why expect_error relies on a comment is because a comment doesn't simply communicate what the error is, but also where that error is.
When using // expect-error: x, only the next line is allowed to emit the compilation error.

As such, if we do:

await expectLater(library.withCode('''
void main() {
  // expect-error: INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
  print('a');
  int value = "string";
}
'''), compiles);

Then this test will fail. Because while the code block indeed contains an INVALID_ASSIGMENT error, the error isn't on the print but instead on the int value = 'string'.

To fix out test, we would have to move the comment on the line before the error:

await expectLater(library.withCode('''
void main() {
  print('a');
  // expect-error: INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
  int value = "string";
}
'''), compiles);

Specifying multiple error codes at the same time.

It is possible for expect-error to specify multiple codes at once by separating them with a ,:

await expectLater(library.withCode(r'''
String fn(int a) => '';

// expect-error: NOT_ENOUGH_POSITIONAL_ARGUMENTS, INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
int a = fn();
'''), compiles);

Importing files/packages in code blocks

It is possible to use import directives to import dart code within code blocks:

await expectLater(library.withCode(r'''
import 'package:riverpod/riverpod.dart';

final provider = Provider<int>((ref) {
  // expect-error: INVALID_ASSIGNMENT
  return 'string';
});
'''), compiles);

The imports available within our code blocks are dependent on that library variable. When we do:

void main() async {
  final library = await Library.parseFromStacktrace();

  test('...', () async {
    await expectLater(library.withCode(...), compiles);
  });
}

that library variable we created tells expect_error what imports the tested code block can use.

In particular, Library.parseFromStacktrace() makes our tested code behave as if it was defined in a separate file within the same folder our test file.

As such, the following code is valid too:

import 'package:expect_error/expect_error.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';

// our test file can use relative import to import another file
import 'relative.dart';

void main() async {
  final library = await Library.parseFromStacktrace();

  test('...', () async {
    await expectLater(library.withCode('''
// our tested code can also import the same file
import 'relative.dart';
'''), compiles);
  });
}

Flutter support

Unfortunately, since expect_error is built on top of the analyzer package, it means that a package cannot both depend on Flutter and expect_error at the same time.

As such, to use expect_error to test compilation errors when interacting with Flutter, a workaround is necessary.
The solution is to move your tests that depends on Flutter in a separate package used only for test purpose, with no dependency on Flutter.

As example, consider a package my_package that depends on Flutter, which exposes a MyWidget class:

// my_package/lib/my_widget.dart
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';

class MyWidget extends StatelessWidget {
  const MyWidget({Key? key, required String parameter}) : super(key: key);

  ...
}

To test this MyWidget class, rather than adding our test within the my_package/test folder, we could create a new Dart project such that our folder architecture looks like:

my_package
  puspec.yaml
  lib
    my_widget.dart
  expect_error_test
    pubspec.yaml
    test
      my_widget_test.dart

This expect_error_test app would depend on expect_error:

name: expect_error_test
---
dev_dependencies:
  expect_error: ...

Then, within expect_error_test/test/my_widget_test, we could do:

void main() {
  final flutterLibrary = await Library.custom(
    packageName: 'my_package', // the name of the package that contains this code block
    packageRoot: '..', // the path to the root of this package
    path: 'test/my_test.dart', // where the codeblock is located within the package
  );

  await expectLater(flutterLibrary.withCode(r'''
import 'package:my_package/my_widget.dart';

void main() {
  // expect-error: MISSING_REQUIRED_ARGUMENT
  MyWidget();
}
'''), compiles);
}

Notice how rather than Library.parseFromStacktrace() we used Library.custom(...).

By doing so, rather than assuming that our code block is within the same folder as our test, we were able to make it behave as if our code block was within my_package.

This way, our tests using expect_error are correctly able to import Flutter code.

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