This module is used for writing unit tests for your applications, you can access it with require('assert').
It aims to be fully compatibe with the node.js assert module, same API and same behavior, just adding support for web browsers. The API and code may contain traces of the CommonJS Unit Testing 1.0 spec which they were based on, but both have evolved significantly since then.
A strict and a legacy mode exist, while it is recommended to only use strict mode.
Strict mode
When using the strict mode, any assert function will use the equality used in the strict function mode. So assert.deepEqual() will, for example, work the same as assert.deepStrictEqual().
It can be accessed using:
constassert=require('assert').strict;
Legacy mode
Deprecated: Use strict mode instead.
When accessing assert directly instead of using the strict property, the Abstract Equality Comparison will be used for any function without a "strict" in its name (e.g. assert.deepEqual()).
It can be accessed using:
constassert=require('assert');
It is recommended to use the strict mode instead as the Abstract Equality Comparison can often have surprising results. Especially in case of assert.deepEqual() as the used comparison rules there are very lax.
E.g.
// WARNING: This does not throw an AssertionError!assert.deepEqual(/a/gi,newDate());
assert.fail(actual, expected, message, operator)
Throws an exception that displays the values for actual and expected separated by the provided operator.