Shoulda
Shoulda helps you write more understandable, maintainable Rails-specific tests under Minitest and Test::Unit.
Quick links
📢 See what's changed in recent versions.
Overview
As a meta gem, the shoulda
gem doesn't contain any code of its own but rather
brings in behavior from two other gems:
For instance:
require "test_helper"
class UserTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
context "associations" do
should have_many(:posts)
end
context "validations" do
should validate_presence_of(:email)
should allow_value("[email protected]").for(:email)
should_not allow_value("not-an-email").for(:email)
end
context "#name" do
should "consist of first and last name" do
user = User.new(first_name: "John", last_name: "Smith")
assert_equal "John Smith", user.name
end
end
end
Here, the context
and should
methods come from Shoulda Context; matchers
(e.g. have_many
, allow_value
) come from Shoulda Matchers.
See the READMEs for these projects for more information.
Compatibility
Shoulda Matchers is tested and supported against Ruby 2.4+, Rails 4.2.x+, RSpec 3.x, and Minitest 5.x.
Contributing
Shoulda is open source, and we are grateful for everyone who's contributed so far.
If you'd like to contribute, please take a look at the instructions for installing dependencies and crafting a good pull request.
Versioning
Shoulda follows Semantic Versioning 2.0 as defined at http://semver.org.
License
Shoulda is copyright © 2006-2019 thoughtbot, inc. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the MIT-LICENSE file.
About thoughtbot
Shoulda is maintained and funded by thoughtbot, inc. The names and logos for thoughtbot are trademarks of thoughtbot, inc.
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