pp-planer/tests/Pest.php
Thorsten Bus d99ca1e017 chore: verify CTS API token auth and package compatibility
- Install 5pm-hdh/churchtools-api v2.1.0
- Verify CTConfig::setApiKey() and authWithLoginToken() both available
- Document API response shapes for /api/events and /api/songs
- Confirm CCLI field present, lyrics available, arrangements included
- TDD: CtsApiSpikeTest with 2 tests, 11 assertions - all passing
- Evidence saved to .sisyphus/evidence/task-0-*.txt
- Findings documented in docs/api-response-shapes.md

Related: Task 0 (Wave 0 - API Spike)
2026-03-01 18:56:03 +01:00

46 lines
1.5 KiB
PHP

<?php
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Test Case
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The closure you provide to your test functions is always bound to a specific PHPUnit test
| case class. By default, that class is "PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase". Of course, you may
| need to change it using the "pest()" function to bind a different classes or traits.
|
*/
pest()->extend(Tests\TestCase::class)->in('Feature');
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Expectations
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| When you're writing tests, you often need to check that values meet certain conditions. The
| "expect()" function gives you access to a set of "expectations" methods that you can use
| to assert different things. Of course, you may extend the Expectation API at any time.
|
*/
expect()->extend('toBeOne', function () {
return $this->toBe(1);
});
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Functions
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| While Pest is very powerful out-of-the-box, you may have some testing code specific to your
| project that you don't want to repeat in every file. Here you can also expose helpers as
| global functions to help you to reduce the number of lines of code in your test files.
|
*/
function something()
{
// ..
}