RSpec Expectations
RSpec::Expectations lets you express expected outcomes on an object in an
example.
expect(account.balance).to eq(Money.new(37.42, :USD))
Install
If you want to use rspec-expectations with rspec, just install the rspec gem
and RubyGems will also install rspec-expectations for you (along with
rspec-core and rspec-mocks):
gem install rspec
Want to run against the main
branch? You'll need to include the dependent
RSpec repos as well. Add the following to your Gemfile
:
%w[rspec-core rspec-expectations rspec-mocks rspec-support].each do |lib|
gem lib, :git => "https://github.com/rspec/#{lib}.git", :branch => 'main'
end
If you want to use rspec-expectations with another tool, like Test::Unit,
Minitest, or Cucumber, you can install it directly:
gem install rspec-expectations
Contributing
Once you've set up the environment, you'll need to cd into the working
directory of whichever repo you want to work in. From there you can run the
specs and cucumber features, and make patches.
NOTE: You do not need to use rspec-dev to work on a specific RSpec repo. You
can treat each RSpec repo as an independent project.
Basic usage
Here's an example using rspec-core:
RSpec.describe Order do
it "sums the prices of the items in its line items" do
order = Order.new
order.add_entry(LineItem.new(:item => Item.new(
:price => Money.new(1.11, :USD)
)))
order.add_entry(LineItem.new(:item => Item.new(
:price => Money.new(2.22, :USD),
:quantity => 2
)))
expect(order.total).to eq(Money.new(5.55, :USD))
end
end
The describe
and it
methods come from rspec-core. The Order
, LineItem
, Item
and Money
classes would be from your code. The last line of the example
expresses an expected outcome. If order.total == Money.new(5.55, :USD)
, then
the example passes. If not, it fails with a message like:
expected: #<Money @value=5.55 @currency=:USD>
got: #<Money @value=1.11 @currency=:USD>
Built-in matchers
Equivalence
expect(actual).to eq(expected)
expect(actual).to eql(expected)
expect(actual).not_to eql(not_expected)
Note: The new expect
syntax no longer supports the ==
matcher.
Identity
expect(actual).to be(expected)
expect(actual).to equal(expected)
Comparisons
expect(actual).to be > expected
expect(actual).to be >= expected
expect(actual).to be <= expected
expect(actual).to be < expected
expect(actual).to be_within(delta).of(expected)
Regular expressions
expect(actual).to match(/expression/)
Note: The new expect
syntax no longer supports the =~
matcher.
Types/classes
expect(actual).to be_an_instance_of(expected)
expect(actual).to be_a(expected)
expect(actual).to be_an(expected)
expect(actual).to be_a_kind_of(expected)
Truthiness
expect(actual).to be_truthy
expect(actual).to be true
expect(actual).to be_falsy
expect(actual).to be false
expect(actual).to be_nil
expect(actual).to_not be_nil
Expecting errors
expect { ... }.to raise_error
expect { ... }.to raise_error(ErrorClass)
expect { ... }.to raise_error("message")
expect { ... }.to raise_error(ErrorClass, "message")
Expecting throws
expect { ... }.to throw_symbol
expect { ... }.to throw_symbol(:symbol)
expect { ... }.to throw_symbol(:symbol, 'value')
Yielding
expect { |b| 5.tap(&b) }.to yield_control
expect { |b| yield_if_true(true, &b) }.to yield_with_no_args
expect { |b| 5.tap(&b) }.to yield_with_args(5)
expect { |b| 5.tap(&b) }.to yield_with_args(Integer)
expect { |b| "a string".tap(&b) }.to yield_with_args(/str/)
expect { |b| [1, 2, 3].each(&b) }.to yield_successive_args(1, 2, 3)
expect { |b| { :a => 1, :b => 2 }.each(&b) }.to yield_successive_args([:a, 1], [:b, 2])
Predicate matchers
expect(actual).to be_xxx
expect(actual).to have_xxx(:arg)
Ranges (Ruby >= 1.9 only)
expect(1..10).to cover(3)
Collection membership
expect(actual).to eq(expected)
expect(actual).to start_with(expected)
expect(actual).to end_with(expected)
expect(actual).to match_array(expected)
expect(actual).to contain_exactly(expected_element1, expected_element2)
expect(actual).to include(expected)
Examples
expect([1, 2, 3]).to eq([1, 2, 3])
expect([1, 2, 3]).to include(1)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to include(2, 3)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to start_with(1)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to start_with(1, 2)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to end_with(3)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to end_with(2, 3)
expect({:a => 'b'}).to include(:a => 'b')
expect("this string").to include("is str")
expect("this string").to start_with("this")
expect("this string").to end_with("ring")
expect([1, 2, 3]).to contain_exactly(2, 3, 1)
expect([1, 2, 3]).to match_array([3, 2, 1])
expect(
[{:a => 'hash'},{:a => 'another'}]
).to match([a_hash_including(:a => 'hash'), a_hash_including(:a => 'another')])
should
syntax
In addition to the expect
syntax, rspec-expectations continues to support the
should
syntax:
actual.should eq expected
actual.should be > 3
[1, 2, 3].should_not include 4
See detailed information on the should
syntax and its usage.
Compound Matcher Expressions
You can also create compound matcher expressions using and
or or
:
expect(alphabet).to start_with("a").and end_with("z")
expect(stoplight.color).to eq("red").or eq("green").or eq("yellow")
Composing Matchers
Many of the built-in matchers are designed to take matchers as
arguments, to allow you to flexibly specify only the essential
aspects of an object or data structure. In addition, all of the
built-in matchers have one or more aliases that provide better
phrasing for when they are used as arguments to another matcher.
Examples
expect { k += 1.05 }.to change { k }.by( a_value_within(0.1).of(1.0) )
expect { s = "barn" }.to change { s }
.from( a_string_matching(/foo/) )
.to( a_string_matching(/bar/) )
expect(["barn", 2.45]).to contain_exactly(
a_value_within(0.1).of(2.5),
a_string_starting_with("bar")
)
expect(["barn", "food", 2.45]).to end_with(
a_string_matching("foo"),
a_value > 2
)
expect(["barn", 2.45]).to include( a_string_starting_with("bar") )
expect(:a => "food", :b => "good").to include(:a => a_string_matching(/foo/))
hash = {
:a => {
:b => ["foo", 5],
:c => { :d => 2.05 }
}
}
expect(hash).to match(
:a => {
:b => a_collection_containing_exactly(
a_string_starting_with("f"),
an_instance_of(Integer)
),
:c => { :d => (a_value < 3) }
}
)
expect { |probe|
[1, 2, 3].each(&probe)
}.to yield_successive_args( a_value < 2, 2, a_value > 2 )
Usage outside rspec-core
You always need to load rspec/expectations
even if you only want to use one part of the library:
require 'rspec/expectations'
Then simply include RSpec::Matchers
in any class:
class MyClass
include RSpec::Matchers
def do_something(arg)
expect(arg).to be > 0
end
end
Also see