module RSpec::Its
Constants
- VERSION
Public Instance Methods
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 139 def is_expected expect(__its_subject) end
Creates a nested example group named by the submitted ‘attribute`, and then generates an example using the submitted block.
@example
# This ... describe Array do its(:size) { should eq(0) } end # ... generates the same runtime structure as this: describe Array do describe "size" do it "should eq(0)" do subject.size.should eq(0) end end end
The attribute can be a ‘Symbol` or a `String`. Given a `String` with dots, the result is as though you concatenated that `String` onto the subject in an expression.
@example
describe Person do subject do Person.new.tap do |person| person.phone_numbers << "555-1212" end end its("phone_numbers.first") { should eq("555-1212") } end
When the subject is a ‘Hash`, you can refer to the Hash keys by specifying a `Symbol` or `String` in an array.
@example
describe "a configuration Hash" do subject do { :max_users => 3, 'admin' => :all_permissions. 'john_doe' => {:permissions => [:read, :write]}} end its([:max_users]) { should eq(3) } its(['admin']) { should eq(:all_permissions) } its(['john_doe', :permissions]) { should eq([:read, :write]) } # You can still access its regular methods this way: its(:keys) { should include(:max_users) } its(:count) { should eq(2) } end
With an implicit subject, ‘is_expected` can be used as an alternative to `should` (e.g. for one-liner use). An `are_expected` alias is also supplied.
@example
describe Array do its(:size) { is_expected.to eq(0) } end
With an implicit subject, ‘will` can be used as an alternative to `expect { subject.attribute }.to matcher` (e.g. for one-liner use).
@example
describe Array do its(:foo) { will raise_error(NoMethodError) } end
With an implicit subject, ‘will_not` can be used as an alternative to `expect { subject.attribute }.to_not matcher` (e.g. for one-liner use).
@example
describe Array do its(:size) { will_not raise_error } end
You can pass more than one argument on the ‘its` block to add some metadata to the generated example
@example
# This ... describe Array do its(:size, :focus) { should eq(0) } end # ... generates the same runtime structure as this: describe Array do describe "size" do it "should eq(0)", :focus do subject.size.should eq(0) end end end
Note that this method does not modify ‘subject` in any way, so if you refer to `subject` in `let` or `before` blocks, you’re still referring to the outer subject.
@example
describe Person do subject { Person.new } before { subject.age = 25 } its(:age) { should eq(25) } end
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 121 def its(attribute, *options, &block) its_caller = caller.select {|file_line| file_line !~ %r(/lib/rspec/its) } describe(attribute.to_s, :caller => its_caller) do let(:__its_subject) do if Array === attribute if Hash === subject attribute.inject(subject) {|inner, attr| inner[attr] } else subject[*attribute] end else attribute_chain = attribute.to_s.split('.') attribute_chain.inject(subject) do |inner_subject, attr| inner_subject.send(attr) end end end def is_expected expect(__its_subject) end alias_method :are_expected, :is_expected def will(matcher=nil, message=nil) unless matcher.supports_block_expectations? raise ArgumentError, "`will` only supports block expectations" end expect { __its_subject }.to matcher, message end def will_not(matcher=nil, message=nil) unless matcher.supports_block_expectations? raise ArgumentError, "`will_not` only supports block expectations" end expect { __its_subject }.to_not matcher, message end def should(matcher=nil, message=nil) RSpec::Expectations::PositiveExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(__its_subject, matcher, message) end def should_not(matcher=nil, message=nil) RSpec::Expectations::NegativeExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(__its_subject, matcher, message) end options << {} unless options.last.kind_of?(Hash) options.last.merge!(:caller => its_caller) example(nil, *options, &block) end end
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 158 def should(matcher=nil, message=nil) RSpec::Expectations::PositiveExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(__its_subject, matcher, message) end
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 162 def should_not(matcher=nil, message=nil) RSpec::Expectations::NegativeExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(__its_subject, matcher, message) end
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 144 def will(matcher=nil, message=nil) unless matcher.supports_block_expectations? raise ArgumentError, "`will` only supports block expectations" end expect { __its_subject }.to matcher, message end
# File lib/rspec/its.rb, line 151 def will_not(matcher=nil, message=nil) unless matcher.supports_block_expectations? raise ArgumentError, "`will_not` only supports block expectations" end expect { __its_subject }.to_not matcher, message end