Files
formipay/node_modules/eslint-plugin-jest/docs/rules/no-disabled-tests.md
dwindown e8fbfb14c1 fix: prevent asset conflicts between React and Grid.js versions
Add coexistence checks to all enqueue methods to prevent loading
both React and Grid.js assets simultaneously.

Changes:
- ReactAdmin.php: Only enqueue React assets when ?react=1
- Init.php: Skip Grid.js when React active on admin pages
- Form.php, Coupon.php, Access.php: Restore classic assets when ?react=0
- Customer.php, Product.php, License.php: Add coexistence checks

Now the toggle between Classic and React versions works correctly.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-18 17:02:14 +07:00

71 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown

# Disallow disabled tests (`no-disabled-tests`)
⚠️ This rule _warns_ in the ✅ `recommended`
[config](https://github.com/jest-community/eslint-plugin-jest/blob/main/README.md#shareable-configurations).
<!-- end auto-generated rule header -->
Jest has a feature that allows you to temporarily mark tests as disabled. This
feature is often helpful while debugging or to create placeholders for future
tests. Before committing changes we may want to check that all tests are
running.
This rule raises a warning about disabled tests.
## Rule details
There are a number of ways to disable tests in Jest:
- by appending `.skip` to the test-suite or test-case
- by prepending the test function name with `x`
- by declaring a test with a name but no function body
- by making a call to `pending()` anywhere within the test
The following patterns are considered warnings:
```js
describe.skip('foo', () => {});
it.skip('foo', () => {});
test.skip('foo', () => {});
describe['skip']('bar', () => {});
it['skip']('bar', () => {});
test['skip']('bar', () => {});
xdescribe('foo', () => {});
xit('foo', () => {});
xtest('foo', () => {});
it('bar');
test('bar');
it('foo', () => {
pending();
});
```
These patterns would not be considered warnings:
```js
describe('foo', () => {});
it('foo', () => {});
test('foo', () => {});
describe.only('bar', () => {});
it.only('bar', () => {});
test.only('bar', () => {});
```
### Limitations
The plugin looks at the literal function names within test code, so will not
catch more complex examples of disabled tests, such as:
```js
const testSkip = test.skip;
testSkip('skipped test', () => {});
const myTest = test;
myTest('does not have function body');
```