RSpec
minitest
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RSpec | minitest | |
---|---|---|
7 | 10 | |
2,867 | 3,243 | |
0.0% | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 8.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
RSpec
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Why Gherkin (Cucumber, SpecFlow,…) Always Failed with UI Test Automation?
RSpec is the most popular “Behaviour Driven Development for Ruby”. RSpec v3.8.0 alone has over 193 million downloads on RubyGems. While RSpec may also be used for unit or integration tests, its download count is quite impressive. As a comparison, the most-downloaded Cucumber v3.1.2 is merely 8.8 million.
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10 Awesome Ruby Gems for Ruby on Rails Web Development
RSpec
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Need help regarding ruby install on Mac
pry and rspec are gems. You had at least 3 rubies (system, rbenv, rvm), and each ruby puts its gems in a different folder. Your rspec might be in a folder for rbenv's ruby. If you switched to rvm's ruby, then bundle exec rspec would fail because rvm's ruby can't find rbenv's gems.
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Introducing a new RSpec
this project is not rspec ](https://rubygems.org/gems/rspec, it is r_spec ](https://rubygems.org/gems/r_spec
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49 Days of Ruby: Day 47 -- Testing Frameworks: RSpec
RSpec defines itself as:
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Building Jekyll-Twitch, the gem
RSpec This is my favorite testing gem. I love how readable and well-organized the tests are.
minitest
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Test Driving a Rails API - Part Two
In this part, we’ll set up our testing environment so that we can test our Rails API using minitest with minitest/spec. We’ll look at the differences between traditional style unit tests and spec-style tests, or specs. I’ll demonstrate why you should use minitest-rails. We’ll look at using rack-test for testing our API. We’ll even create our own generator to generate API specs.
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Where can I learn to deliver a proper solution?
I forgot to mention that reading code is also a good way to learn how to write code, it's like inspiration. Check repos of some gems you like. For example sidekiq https://github.com/sidekiq/sidekiq/tree/main/lib/sidekiq Or minitest https://github.com/minitest/minitest/tree/master/lib/minitest
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I_suck_and_my_tests_are_order_dependent
All through GitHub.
1. From https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/6ffb29d24e05abbd9ffe3ea9..., click "Blame" on the header bar over the file contents.
2. Scroll down to the line and click on the commit in the left column.
3. Scroll down to the file that removed the line from its previous file, activesupport/lib/active_support/test_case.rb.
4. Click the three-dots menu in that file's header bar and select "View file".
5. Click "History" in the header bar of the contributors, above the file contents.
6. I guessed here at commit 281f488 on its message: "Use the method provided by minitest to make tests order dependent". There's a comment here that identified the problem which led to, and provided context for, the change in 6ffb29d.
The OP is from minitest's documentation, so to find the introduction in minitest, it's basically the same process.
1. Go to https://github.com/minitest/minitest.
2. Search the repo for the method name. Even just "i_suck" will match the commit.
3. Select the oldest commit in the results. That's a4553e2.
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Minitest, we've been doing it wrong?
The new test convention is now "test/**/test_*.rb" instead of "test/**/*_test.rb". For example, Puma and Minitest are popular repositories using this naming pattern.
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Ask HN: Codebases with great, easy to read code?
https://github.com/seattlerb/minitest really removed the FUD for me when i started learning Ruby and Rails. Its full of metaprogramming and fancy tricks but is also quite small, practical and informal in its style.
e.g. "assert_equal" is really just "expected == actual" at it's core but it uses both both a block param (a kind of closure) for composing a default message and calls "diff" which is a dumb wrapper around the system "diff" utility (horrors!). There is even some evolved nastiness in there for an API change that uses the existing assert/refute logic to raise an informative message. this is handled with a simple if and not some sort of complex hard-to-follow factory pattern or dependency injection misuse.
https://github.com/seattlerb/minitest/blob/master/lib/minite...
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49 Days of Ruby: Day 46 -- Testing Frameworks: Minitest
Those are just a few examples of what you can do with Minitest! Check out their README on GitHub and keep on exploring.
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Ruby through the lens of Go
One of the things I love the most about Ruby is that it tends to coalesce around one or two really popular libraries. Rails is the big one obviously, but over time you see libraries designed for a particular purpose "winning" over other things. This includes things like linting/code analysis (Rubocop), authentication (Devise), testing (RSpec and Minitest) and more. The emphasis is on making something good great rather than making a lot of different good things.
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Best way to learn testing in RSpec?
Then try minitest (unit and spec verisons) https://github.com/seattlerb/minitest
What are some alternatives?
shoulda-matchers - Simple one-liner tests for common Rails functionality
Test::Unit - test-unit
Cucumber - A home for issues that are common to multiple cucumber repositories
Bacon - a small RSpec clone
Pundit Matchers - A set of RSpec matchers for testing Pundit authorisation policies.
Spinach - Spinach is a BDD framework on top of Gherkin.
RR - RR is a test double framework that features a rich selection of double techniques and a terse syntax. ⛺
Aruba - Test command-line applications with Cucumber-Ruby, RSpec or Minitest.
Capybara - Acceptance test framework for web applications
Fuubar - The instafailing RSpec progress bar formatter