---- Jay McGaffigan <hooligan...@gmail.com> wrote: > Have you looked at JTestR? > I'm not sure how active it is being developed and it might not do what > you are looking for... but it might be worth a shot. >
Yes. I can pretty much do all of what jtestr is doing. But, I believe that when you mock a java class that mock can not be returned in another java class that you are testing. So, if I have a java class that creates a java object of a DB object, I don't think I can mock that java DB object and expect the java that I'm testing to use that mock. I don't think Jtestr can do that, because I don't believe jruby is able to that. I maybe wrong, but jtestr examples only show simple mocking of say a hash. I can do that. But, if I need to mock the java hash object that is used in a java class, it will not return that mock to the java class I am testing. Again I might be wrong about jtestr. Maybe it can do that. I know I cannot just using jruby. I have tried with db objects and pinged Nick Sieger who replied it was not possible. _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users