CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2011/ch2 2e gp: Difference between revisions
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
The in-built, ready to use unit testing mechanism for Ruby is called Test::Unit.It belongs to the XUnit family unit testing framework. It has a setup method for initialization, a teardown method for cleanup and the actual test methods itself. The tests are bundled separately in a test class in the code it is aimed to test. | The in-built, ready to use unit testing mechanism for Ruby is called Test::Unit.It belongs to the XUnit family unit testing framework. It has a setup method for initialization, a teardown method for cleanup and the actual test methods itself. The tests are bundled separately in a test class in the code it is aimed to test. | ||
=== Assertions === | === Assertions === | ||
We can use Test::Unit to make [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assertion_(computing) assertions]. The test is successful if the assertion is true and fails if the assertion is false. | |||
{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=5 | {| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=5 |
Revision as of 15:26, 17 September 2011
Testing Frameworks for Ruby
This page serves as a knowledge source for understanding the different Testing Frameworks available for Ruby.
Introduction
There are a lot of testing tools that are available for Ruby language, they have different features and can be applied on different platforms. Here is a brief introduction and feature comparisons of popular testing frameworks. [EDIT NEEDED]
Unit Testing
Unit Testing is a method by which we can isolate and test a unit functionality of the program, typically individual methods during and long after the code is written.
Test::Unit
The in-built, ready to use unit testing mechanism for Ruby is called Test::Unit.It belongs to the XUnit family unit testing framework. It has a setup method for initialization, a teardown method for cleanup and the actual test methods itself. The tests are bundled separately in a test class in the code it is aimed to test.
Assertions
We can use Test::Unit to make assertions. The test is successful if the assertion is true and fails if the assertion is false.
assert( boolean, [message] ) | True if boolean |
assert_equal( expected, actual, [message] ) assert_not_equal( expected, actual, [message] ) |
True if expected == actual |
assert_raise( Exception,... ) {block} assert_nothing_raised( Exception,...) {block} |
True if the block raises (or doesn't) one of the listed exceptions. |