"eql?" matches object references, you should use "==" to match equality.
- Maurício Linhares http://alinhavado.wordpress.com/ (pt-br) | http://blog.codevader.com/ (en) On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 1:26 PM, Leandro Pedroni <ilpo...@gmail.com> wrote: > rspec 1.1.11 and it's rails sidekick. > > After writing a few specs for an object I created that inherits form > an Hash I noticed that eql wasn't matching hashes that where actually > matching (I'm pretty sure it worked fine before): > > {:foo => 0, :bar => 1}.should eql({:foo => 0, :bar => 1}) > # => expected {:foo=>0, :bar=>1}, got {:foo=>0, :bar=>1} > (using .eql?) > > h={:foo => 0, :bar => 1} > h.should eql(h) > # => pass > > by the way == still works: > ({:foo => 0, :bar => 1} == {:foo => 0, :bar => 1}).should > # => Still passes > > It works ok with everything else... > I obviously did something wrong. Any clue? Where should I look? > > Cheers > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users@rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users