RSpec 2 matchers for testing your html.
- for testing complicated html output, for simple matching consider use:
- developer-firendly output in error messages
- built on top of nokogiri
- has support for capybara, see below
- syntax is similar to have_tag matcher from old-school rspec-rails, but with own syntactic sugar
- framework agnostic, as input should be String(or capybara's page, see below)
Add to your Gemfile in the :test
group:
gem 'rspec-html-matchers'
as this gem requires nokogiri, here instructions for installing it.
so perharps your code produces following output:
<h1>Simple Form</h1>
<form action="/users" method="post">
<p>
<input type="email" name="user[email]" />
</p>
<p>
<input type="submit" id="special_submit" />
</p>
</form>
so you test it with following:
rendered.should have_tag('form', :with => { :action => '/users', :method => 'post' }) do
with_tag "input", :with => { :name => "user[email]", :type => 'email' }
with_tag "input#special_submit", :count => 1
without_tag "h1", :text => 'unneeded tag'
without_tag "p", :text => /content/i
end
Example about should be self-descriptive, but if not refer to have_tag documentation
Input could be any html string. Let's take a look at these examples:
-
matching tags by css:
# simple examples: '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p') '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag(:p) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p#qwerty') '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p.qwe.rty') # more complicated examples: '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p strong') '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p#qwerty strong') '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p.qwe.rty strong') # or you can use another syntax for examples above '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p') do with_tag('strong') end '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p#qwerty') do with_tag('strong') end '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty"><strong>Para</strong>graph</p>'.should have_tag('p.qwe.rty') do with_tag('strong') end
-
special case for classes matching:
# all of this are equivalent: '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :with => { :class => 'qwe rty' }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :with => { :class => 'rty qwe' }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :with => { :class => ['rty', 'qwe'] }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :with => { :class => ['qwe', 'rty'] })
The same works with
:without
:# all of this are equivalent: '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :without => { :class => 'qwe rty' }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :without => { :class => 'rty qwe' }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :without => { :class => ['rty', 'qwe'] }) '<p class="qwe rty" id="qwerty">Paragraph</p>'.should have_tag('p', :without => { :class => ['qwe', 'rty'] })
-
content matching:
'<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p', :text => ' Some content here') # or '<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p') do with_text ' Some content here' end '<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p', :text => /Some content here/) # or '<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p') do with_text /Some content here/ end # mymock.text == 'Some content here' '<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p', :content => mymock.text) # or '<p> Some content here</p>'.should have_tag('p') do with_content mymock.text end
-
usage with capybara and cucumber:
page.should have_tag( ... )
where page
is an instance of Capybara::Session
-
also included shorthand matchers for form inputs:
and of course you can use the without_
matchers (see the documentation).
You can find more on RubyDoc, take a look at have_tag method.
Also, please read CHANGELOG, it might be helpful.
- Fork the repository
- Add tests for your feature
- Write the code
- Add documentation for your contribution
- Send a pull request
Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Dmitrij Mjakotnyi
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