Custom matchers

Imagine you're building a full-stack application. Inevitably, it fetches and processes data from the server in order to render the corresponding UI. To keep it both type- and runtime-safe, you introduce a validation library to define schemas for your data types and keep them in check.
For example, you may have a user schema:
import z from 'zod'

export const userSchema = z.object({
	id: z.string(),
	name: z.string(),
})

export type User = z.infer<typeof userSchema>
Above, we are defining a simple userSchema containing fields id and name. Then we are inferring the user object's type using z.infer and exporting it as a User type for our application to use.
Then, you have a function responsible for fetching the user:
import type { User } from './schemas'

export async function fetchUser(id: string): Promise<User> {
	return db.user.findFirst<User>({ where: { id } })
}
It is clear that the fetchUser() function must return an object of the User type, which also means that it must match the userSchema.
How would you reflect this intention in tests?
import { userSchema } from './schemas'

test('returns the user by id', async () => {
	const user = await fetchUser('abc-123')
	const result = userSchema.safeParse(user)

	expect(result.error).toBeUndefined()
	expect(result.data).toEqual({
		id: 'abc-123',
		name: 'John Maverick',
	})
})
You would also need to mock the fetchUser()'s dependency on the db but I am omitting this step for brevity.
So you fetch the user with the controlled id (await fetchUser('abc-123')), parse it with the schema (userSchema.safeParse(user)), and assert that there were no errors and the parsed object matches the expected mock user.
While this testing strategy works, there are two issues with it:
  1. It's quite verbose. Imagine employing this strategy to verify dozens of scenarios. You are paying 3 LOC for what is, conceptually, a single assertion;
  2. It's distracting. Parsing the object and validating the parsed result are technical details exclusive to the intention. It's not the intention itself. It has nothing to do with the fetchUser() behaviors you're testing.
Luckily, there are ways to redesign this approach to be more declartive and expressive by using a custom matcher.

Your task

👨‍💼 In this exercise, your task will be to rewrite the existing test at to use the matcher called .toMatchSchema(). The only thing is, this matcher doesn't exist. You have to create it!
Head to and follow the instructions to implement your custom matcher. Don't forget to include the setup file in and have the tests passing once you refactor them.
Good luck!

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