Sorry, after much frustration, I closed the terminal window and restarted
everything. The test passed. I have a feeling it might have had something
to do with Spork or Guard... sorry for the false alarm! I should restart my
terminal more often!
On Wednesday, February 29, 2012 6:18:10 AM UTC-3, Justin Ko wrote:
>
>
> On Feb 28, 2012, at 9:43 PM, Mohamad El-Husseini wrote:
>
> > I ran this scenario in the console and it works as expected. But RSpec
> keeps failing the test and I can't understand why.
> >
> > describe User do
> >
> > before do
> > @user = User.new(name: "Mickey Mouse", email: "mic...@disney.com",
> password: "m1ckey", password_confirmation: "m1ckey")
> > end
> >
> > # Password
> > describe "when password is not present" do
> > before { @user.password = @user.password_confirmation = " " }
> > it { should_not be_valid }
> > end
> > end
> >
> > --> expected valid? to return false, got true
> >
> > If I take out the @user.password_confirmation from the assignment, it
> works:
> >
> > before { @user.password = " " }
> > it { should_not be_valid }
> >
> > But, as I said, using the console I can verify that everything works as
> expected. Why does adding @password_confirmation break the test?
> >
> > Here's my user model:
> >
> > class User < ActiveRecord::Base
> > attr_accessible :name, :email, :password, :password_confirmation
> > has_secure_password
> > validates :password, length: { minimum: 6 }
> > end
> > _______________________________________________
> > rspec-users mailing list
> > rspec-users@rubyforge.org
> > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users
>
> Can't reproduce. What versions are you using? Ruby, Rails, RSpec
>
> Also, do you have a `subject` set?
> _______________________________________________
> 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