Tasks 16-20: Online Board Tests (Search/Filter, Tabs, Flight List, Details Modal, Time/Date) - Task 16: Search & Filter tests (37 tests) - departure/arrival cities, passenger count, cabin class - Task 17: Arrival/Departure Tabs tests (45 tests) - tab switching, flight display, sorting - Task 18: Flight List View tests (50 tests) - display, sorting, filtering, pagination, loading states - Task 19: Flight Details Modal tests (40 tests) - opening/closing, content display, actions - Task 20: Time & Date Filter tests (43 tests) - date selection, time ranges, calendar navigation Tasks 21-25: Flight Details Tests (Flight Info, Passengers, Seats, Services, Fares) - Task 21: Flight Info Display tests (40 tests) - basic info, airports, route visualization, timeline - Task 22: Passenger Info tests (50 tests) - passenger list, details, services, special requirements - Task 23: Seat Selection tests (50 tests) - seat map, selection, categories, recommendations - Task 24: Service Selection tests (25 tests) - baggage, meals, seats, summary - Task 25: Fare Display tests (55 tests) - fare breakdown, comparisons, discounts, refunds All tests follow AAA pattern and use data-testid selectors matching Angular version. Total: 245 tests across 10 feature suites.
The package exports an array of strings. Each string is an identifier for a license exception under the Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) software license metadata standard.
Copyright and Licensing
SPDX
"SPDX" is a federally registered United States trademark of The Linux Foundation Corporation.
From version 2.0 of the SPDX specification:
Copyright © 2010-2015 Linux Foundation and its Contributors. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 Unported. All other rights are expressly reserved.
The Linux Foundation and the SPDX working groups are good people. Only they decide what "SPDX" means, as a standard and otherwise. I respect their work and their rights. You should, too.
This Package
I created this package by copying exception identifiers out of the SPDX specification. That work was mechanical, routine, and required no creativity whatsoever. - Kyle Mitchell, package author
United States users concerned about intellectual property may wish to discuss the following Supreme Court decisions with their attorneys:
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Baker v. Selden, 101 U.S. 99 (1879)
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Feist Publications, Inc., v. Rural Telephone Service Co., 499 U.S. 340 (1991)