* move delay and view transitions to inside swap function
* Fix indenting and add tests
* move delay and view transitions to inside swap function
* Fix indenting and add tests
* revert rollback of feat: handle 'unset'for HX-Reselect in swap function
* Fix old npm dependencies
* implement web-test-runner tests for headless alongside Mocha browser tests
* Increase test and code coverage
* update to 100% coverage and impove eslint
* Update testing Doco
* revert all htmx changes and updates/disable tests needed
* fix browser mocha test
* Default testing to use playwrite only instead of puppeter
* playwright install fix
* Imporve test summary reporting
* flatten false looks closer to original
* Update parseInterval to handle "0" correctly
When a parameter like "0ms" is passed in to parseInterval it gets parsed to 0.
Previously this would result in a return value of "undefined" because 0 is falsy
and thus the `return 0 || undefined` statements return undefined.
The purpose of the form `parseFloat(str) || undefined` was to return "undefined" if
parseFloat failed (parseFloat returns NaN, a falsy value, if it can't parse its
argument). Unfortunately, as mentioned, parseFloat can also succeed and return a
falsy value -- when the argument is "0" (or "0.0", etc.). So the new code, rather
than depending on the falsiness of the result of parseFloat, explicitly checks for
a NaN.
* Adds some semicolons
Adds some semicolons to parseInterval (and tests) for consistency.
* Add one more parseInterval test for "0"
Adds test test to make sure parseInterval works on "0".
* Adds functional tests for every, swap, settle, throttle, and delay
* Explcitly check that setTimeout values are > 0
These values come from user settings that are read from parseInterval,
so they could be a number or undefined.
If the value being checked is > 0 setTimeout will be called with some
associated function. If the value is 0 or 'undefined' the associated function
will be called immediately ('undefined' is not greater than 0).
* Change '!== undefined' to '> 0'
`pollInterval !== undefined` is a subtly different conditional than just `pollInterval` or `pollInterval > 0` (which are equivalent). Changes the conditional to `pollInterval > 0` so as to not change the behavior but also be more explicit in the test.