Usage in Deno
import assert from "node:assert"; const { rejects } = assert;
rejects(block: (() => Promise<unknown>) | Promise<unknown>,message?: string | Error,): Promise<void>
Awaits the asyncFn promise or, if asyncFn is a function, immediately
calls the function and awaits the returned promise to complete. It will then
check that the promise is rejected.
If asyncFn is a function and it throws an error synchronously,assert.rejects() will return a rejected Promise with that error. If the
function does not return a promise, assert.rejects() will return a rejectedPromise with an ERR_INVALID_RETURN_VALUE error. In both cases the error
handler is skipped.
Besides the async nature to await the completion behaves identically to throws.
If specified, error can be a Class,
RegExp, a validation function,
an object where each property will be tested for, or an instance of error where
each property will be tested for including the non-enumerable message andname properties.
If specified, message will be the message provided by the AssertionError if the asyncFn fails to reject.
import assert from 'node:assert/strict'; await assert.rejects( async () => { throw new TypeError('Wrong value'); }, { name: 'TypeError', message: 'Wrong value', }, );
import assert from 'node:assert/strict'; await assert.rejects( async () => { throw new TypeError('Wrong value'); }, (err) => { assert.strictEqual(err.name, 'TypeError'); assert.strictEqual(err.message, 'Wrong value'); return true; }, );
import assert from 'node:assert/strict'; assert.rejects( Promise.reject(new Error('Wrong value')), Error, ).then(() => { // ... });
error cannot be a string. If a string is provided as the second
argument, then error is assumed to be omitted and the string will be used formessage instead. This can lead to easy-to-miss mistakes. Please read the
example in throws carefully if using a string as the second
argument gets considered.
Promise<void>
rejects(): Promise<void>
error: AssertPredicate
Promise<void>