module Spec::Methods

Defined in:

spec/methods.cr

Instance Method Summary

Instance Method Detail

def after_all(&block) #

Executes the given block after the last spec in the current context runs.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks, or outside of them it's the root context. This is independent of the source location the specs and this hook are defined.

If multiple blocks are registered on the same context, they are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

it "sample_a" { }

describe "nested_context" do
  after_all do
    puts "runs at end of nested_context"
  end

  it "sample_b" { }
end

[View source]
def after_each(&block) #

Executes the given block after each spec in the current context runs.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks, or outside of them it's the root context. Nested contexts inherit the *_each blocks of their ancestors.

If multiple blocks are registered for the same spec, the blocks defined in the outermost context go first. Blocks on the same context are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

it "sample_a" { }

describe "nested_context" do
  after_each do
    puts "runs after sample_b"
  end

  it "sample_b" { }
end

[View source]
def around_all(&block : ExampleGroup::Procsy -> ) #

Executes the given block when the current context runs.

The block must call run on the given Context::Procsy object.

This is essentially a #before_all and #after_all hook combined into one. It is useful for example when setup and teardown steps need shared state.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks. This hook does not work outside such a block (i.e. in the root context).

If multiple blocks are registered for the same spec, the blocks defined in the outermost context go first. Blocks on the same context are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

describe "main_context" do
  around_each do |example|
    puts "runs at beginning of main_context"
    example.run
    puts "runs at end of main_context"
  end

  it "sample_a" { }

  describe "nested_context" do
    around_each do |example|
      puts "runs at beginning of nested_context"
      example.run
      puts "runs at end of nested_context"
    end

    it "sample_b" { }
  end
end

[View source]
def around_each(&block : Example::Procsy -> ) #

Executes the given block when each spec in the current context runs.

The block must call run on the given Example::Procsy object.

This is essentially a #before_each and #after_each hook combined into one. It is useful for example when setup and teardown steps need shared state.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks, or outside of them it's the root context. Nested contexts inherit the *_each blocks of their ancestors.

If multiple blocks are registered for the same spec, the blocks defined in the outermost context go first. Blocks on the same context are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

it "sample_a" { }

describe "nested_context" do
  around_each do |example|
    puts "runs before sample_b"
    example.run
    puts "runs after sample_b"
  end

  it "sample_b" { }
end

[View source]
def before_all(&block) #

Executes the given block before the first spec in the current context runs.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks, or outside of them it's the root context. This is independent of the source location the specs and this hook are defined.

If multiple blocks are registered on the same context, they are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

it "sample_a" { }

describe "nested_context" do
  before_all do
    puts "runs at start of nested_context"
  end

  it "sample_b" { }
end

[View source]
def before_each(&block) #

Executes the given block before each spec in the current context runs.

A context is defined by #describe or #context blocks, or outside of them it's the root context. Nested contexts inherit the *_each blocks of their ancestors.

If multiple blocks are registered for the same spec, the blocks defined in the outermost context go first. Blocks on the same context are executed in order of definition.

require "spec"

it "sample_a" { }

describe "nested_context" do
  before_each do
    puts "runs before sample_b"
  end

  it "sample_b" { }
end

[View source]
def context(description, file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__, end_line = __END_LINE__, focus : Bool = false, tags : String | Enumerable(String) | Nil = nil, &block) #

Defines an example group that establishes a specific context, like empty array versus array with elements. Inside &block examples are defined by #it or #pending.

It is functionally equivalent to #describe.

If focus is true, only this #context, and others marked with focus: true, will run.


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def describe(description, file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__, end_line = __END_LINE__, focus : Bool = false, tags : String | Enumerable(String) | Nil = nil, &block) #

Defines an example group that describes a unit to be tested. Inside &block examples are defined by #it or #pending.

Several #describe blocks can be nested.

Example:

require "spec"

describe "Int32" do
  describe "+" do
    it "adds" { (1 + 1).should eq 2 }
  end
end

If focus is true, only this #describe, and others marked with focus: true, will run.


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def fail(msg, file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__) #

Fails an example.

This method can be used to manually fail an example defined in an #it block.


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def it(description = "assert", file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__, end_line = __END_LINE__, focus : Bool = false, tags : String | Enumerable(String) | Nil = nil, &block) #

Defines a concrete test case.

The test is performed by the block supplied to &block.

Example:

require "spec"

it "adds" { (1 + 1).should eq 2 }

It is usually used inside a #describe or #context section.

If focus is true, only this test, and others marked with focus: true, will run.


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def pending(description = "assert", file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__, end_line = __END_LINE__, focus : Bool = false, tags : String | Enumerable(String) | Nil = nil, &) #

Defines a pending test case.

&block is never evaluated. It can be used to describe behaviour that is not yet implemented.

Example:

require "spec"

pending "check cat" { cat.alive? }

It is usually used inside a #describe or #context section.

If focus is true, only this test, and others marked with focus: true, will run.


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def pending(description = "assert", file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__, end_line = __END_LINE__, focus : Bool = false, tags : String | Enumerable(String) | Nil = nil) #

Defines a yet-to-be-implemented pending test case

If focus is true, only this test, and others marked with focus: true, will run.


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def pending!(msg = "Cannot run example", file = __FILE__, line = __LINE__) #

Marks the current example pending

In case an example needs to be pending on some condition that requires executing it, this allows to mark it as such rather than letting it fail or never run.

require "spec"

it "test git" do
  cmd = Process.find_executable("git")
  pending!("git is not available") unless cmd
  cmd.ends_with?("git").should be_true
end

[View source]