Thanks, David.
I hope that is less/non dependent on Rails/ActiveSupport. It seems to
depend on Nokogiri, and hopefully uses some duck-typeable response
object. I guess they use response_body.
I've concocted a strange brew of RSpec, Johnson and envjs. It can already
execute normal Javascript methods, jQuery, and AJAX calls. The only
missing piece is the assert_select-like framework:
it "should make an ajax call and format some content" do
click_async "a#edit"
response.should have_selector('div') # this last part, I need
end
I don't know if anyone else is working on this front, but it is
getting us closer to having a pure Ruby/non-browser spec framework
Cheers,
Ed
Ed Howland
http://greenprogrammer.wordpress.com
http://twitter.com/ed_howland
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 3:38 PM, David Chelimsky <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 12:47 PM, Ed Howland <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm trying to write an example that uses response.should have_tag('div')
>> outside of a Rails view test. I read somewhere that as long as you
>> have an instance variable named @response and it respondes to .body
>> with some HTML, it should work, but I get this failure:
>
> have_tag is on its way to its death. It won't exist in rspec-rails-2,
> though I hesitate to deprecate it in rspec-rails-1.x since many folks
> won't be able to upgrade directly anyhow.
>
> I'd recommend using webrat's have_selector instead.
>
>>
>> undefined method `assert_select' for
>> #<ActiveSupport::TestCase::Subclass_1:0x103
>>
>> Also, has anyone cooked this up to work with Sinatra, or are you
>> restricted to using Rails? Seems that some Nokogiri wiz could work up
>> a substitute for ActiveSupport.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Ed
>>
>> Ed Howland
>> http://greenprogrammer.wordpress.com
>> http://twitter.com/ed_howland
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 6:42 PM, patrick99e99 <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> I am new to BDD, so am not quite sure how I am supposed to write a
>>> test like this.. I get:
>>> "ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid in 'User should fail when passwords do
>>> not match'
>>> Validation failed: Password doesn't match confirmation"
>>>
>>> If anyone can guide me in the right direction, I'd appreciate it..
>>>
>>> -patrick
>>>
>>> require 'spec_helper'
>>>
>>> describe User do
>>>
>>> before(:each) do
>>> @valid_attributes = {
>>> :login => 'test_name',
>>> :password => 'password',
>>> :password_confirmation => 'password'
>>> }
>>>
>>> �...@invalid_attributes = @valid_attributes.merge(:password =>
>>> 'not_the_same_password')
>>> end
>>>
>>> it "should create a valid user" do
>>> User.create!(@valid_attributes).should be_true
>>> end
>>>
>>> it "should fail when passwords do not match" do
>>> User.create!(@invalid_attributes).should be_false
>>> end
>>>
>>> end
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> rspec-users mailing list
>>> [email protected]
>>> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users
>>>
>> _______________________________________________
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