steak 0.3.0 → 0.3.1
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- data/README.rdoc +6 -2
- data/generators/steak/templates/helpers.rb +2 -0
- data/generators/steak/templates/paths.rb +2 -0
- metadata +15 -6
data/README.rdoc
CHANGED
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ Steak is like Cucumber but in plain Ruby. This is how an acceptance spec looks l
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No explicit givens, whens or thens. No steps, no english, just Ruby: RSpec, Steak and, in this example, some factories and Capybara. That's all.
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-
If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (+feature+, +scenario+, +background+). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)
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If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (+feature+, +scenario+, +background+). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators, a rake task and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)
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== Getting started
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@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ Run the generator:
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$ script/generate steak
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That will create some basic helper files and directory structure under the +spec+ directory, already configured for +Webrat+.
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That will create some basic helper files and directory structure under the +spec/acceptance+ directory, already configured for +Webrat+. Spend one minute on getting familiar with the structure and files you've got.
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Now you may want to create your first acceptance spec:
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@@ -77,6 +77,10 @@ You run your acceptance specs just like your regular specs. Individually...
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$ spec spec/acceptance
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...you can also do:
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$ rake spec:acceptance
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== Credits
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Steak is developed and maintained by Luismi Cavallé with the help and support of the rest of the BeBanjo team: Sergio Gil and Jorge Gómez Sancha.
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metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
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name: steak
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 0.3.
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version: 0.3.1
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- "Luismi Cavall\xC3\xA9"
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@@ -9,11 +9,20 @@ autorequire:
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bindir: bin
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cert_chain: []
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date: 2010-01-
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date: 2010-01-02 00:00:00 +01:00
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default_executable:
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dependencies:
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dependencies:
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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name: rspec
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type: :runtime
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version_requirement:
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version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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requirements:
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- - ">="
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: "0"
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version:
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description: Minimalist acceptance testing on top of RSpec
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email: luismi@lmcavalle.com
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executables: []
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@@ -60,7 +69,7 @@ rubyforge_project:
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rubygems_version: 1.3.5
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signing_key:
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specification_version: 3
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summary:
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summary: If you are not in Rails but use RSpec, then Steak is just some aliases providing you with the language of acceptance testing (feature, scenario, background). If you are in Rails, you also have a couple of generators, a rake task and full Rails integration testing (meaning Webrat support, for instance)
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test_files:
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- spec/acceptance/acceptance_helper.rb
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- spec/acceptance/acceptance_spec_generator_spec.rb
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