Shared Should allows you to easily create reusable shoulds, contexts and setups with familiar looking Shoulda syntax. Inspired by Rspec's shared example groups for context reuse, Shared Should allows sharing of contexts, shoulds, and setup blocks. Shared Should goes even further by allowing chaining and parameterization to fine-tune the usage of the shared functionality.
Some quick examples to get you started using Shared Should. The domain of the examples is customers renting and purchasing textbooks - something like we do at BookRenter.com.
Sharing shoulds is easy.
context "Book" do
context "with an in-stock book" do
setup { @book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00 }
### Define a shared should
share_should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
context "with a rentable book" do
setup { @book.rentable = true }
### Use the "be available for checkout" share_should
use_should "be available for checkout"
end
context "with a purchasable book" do
setup { @book.purchasable = true }
### Use the "be available for checkout" share_should in this context too
use_should "be available for checkout"
end
### ...or DRY it with chaining
setup("with a rentable book") { @book.rentable = true }.use_should("be available for checkout")
setup("with a purchasable book") { @book.purchasable = true }.use_should("be available for checkout")
end
end
Sharing setups is easy, too.
context "Book" do
### Define a shared setup
share_setup "for an in-stock book" { @book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00) }
context "with an in-stock rentable book" do
### Use the shared setup here
use_setup "for an in-stock book"
### Do some additional setup after the shared setup
setup { @book.rentable = true }
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
context "with an in-stock purchasable book" do
### Use the shared setup again
use_setup "for an in-stock book"
setup { @book.purchasable = true }
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
### ...or DRY it with chaining
use_setup("for an in-stock book").
setup("with a rentable book") { @book.rentable = true }.
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
use_setup("for an in-stock book").
setup("with a purchasable book") { @book.purchasable = true }.
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
Sharing whole contexts? Schmeasy!
context "Book" do
context "with an in-stock book" do
setup { @book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00) }
### Define a shared context
share_context "for a book available for checkout" do
should "be in stock" { assert @book.quantity > 0 }
should "have a non-negative price" { assert @book.price > 0 }
should "be rentable or purchasable" { assert @book.rentable || @book.purchasable }
end
context "with a rentable book" do
setup { @book.rentable = true }
### Run the shoulds inside the shared context with a rentable book
use_context "for a book available for checkout"
end
context "with a purchasable book" do
setup { @book.purchasable = true }
### Run the shoulds inside the shared context again with a purchasable book
use_context "for a book available for checkout"
end
### ...or DRY it up with chaining
setup("with a rentable book") { @book.rentable = true }.use_context("for a book available for checkout")
setup("with a purchasable book") { @book.purchasable = true }.use_context("for a book available for checkout")
end
end
Some rules:
- When use_should, use_context or use_setup is invoked, it searches up the context hierarchy to find a matching shared definition.
- You can redefine your shares by using the same name. These shares will only be available in in the current and descendant contexts.
- Shares defined at the root (on your TestCase) are available in all contexts.
Shared Should provides powerful chaining capabilities.
Chained setups and use_setups are applied to their parent context.
context "Book" do
share_setup "for an in-stock book" do
@book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00
end
context "with a rentable book" do
use_setup("for an in-stock book").setup { @book.rentable = true }
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
end
Or chained setups and use_setups can be chained to a should, use_should, context, or use_context. These setups will not be applied to the parent context.
context "Book" do
share_setup "for an in-stock book" do
@book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00
end
use_setup("for an in-stock book").
setup("for a rentable book") { @book.rentable = true }.
should("be available for checkout") { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
Shared functions can also be parameterized using block parameters. This can be done for shared setups, shared shoulds, and the setups and shoulds contained within a shared context. The value passed to the shared function is the return value of the given parameterization block. The below example parameterizes a shared setup.
context "Book" do
share_setup "for an in-stock book" do |rentable|
@book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00, :rentable => rentable, :purchasable => false)
end
context "with rentable book" do
# the return value of the block is "true" which will be passed as the block parameter "rentable"
use_setup("for an in-stock book").given { true }
should "be available for checkout" { assert @book.available_for_checkout? }
end
end
Here is a parameterized shared should.
context "Book" do
context "with in-stock book" do
setup { @book = Book.new(:quantity => 1) }
share_should "be unavailable for checkout for price" do |price|
@book.price = price
assert_false @book.available_for_checkout?
end
use_should("be unavailable for checkout for price").given("zero") { 0 }
use_should("be unavailable for checkout for price").given("a negative price") { -1 }
end
end
And a parameterized shared context.
context "Book" do
context "with in-stock book" do
setup { @book = Book.new(:quantity => 1) }
share_context "for a book available for checkout at price" do
# parameters are on the setup and shoulds, not on the context
setup { |price| @book.price = price }
# we could also access price in the should blocks, but we don't need it again
should "be in stock" { assert @book.quantity > 0 }
should "have a non-negative price" { assert @book.price > 0 }
should "be rentable or purchasable" { assert @book.rentable || @book.purchasable }
end
use_context("for a book available for checkout at price").given("a positive price") { 10_00 }
end
end
The shared functions also accept multiple parameters when the parameterization block returns an array.
context "Book" do
context "with rentable book" do
setup { @book = Book.new(:rentable => true) }
share_should "be unavailable for checkout for quantity and price" do |quantity, price|
@book.quantity = quantity
@book.price = price
assert_false @book.available_for_checkout?
end
use_should("be unavailable for checkout for quantity and price").given("a zero quantity") { [0, 10_00] }
use_should("be unavailable for checkout for quantity and price").given("a zero price") { [1, 0] }
end
end
The shared functions can also be re-usable across multiple test cases.
In your test helper file:
class Test::Unit::TestCase
share_setup "for an in-stock book" do |rentable, purchasable|
@book = Book.new(:quantity => 1, :price => 10_00, :rentable => rentable, :purchasable => purchasable)
end
end
In your test file:
class BookTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
context "with an in-stock book" do
use_setup("for an in-stock book").given { [true, true] }
should "be in stock" { assert @book.quantity > 0 }
end
end
Shared Shoulda is maintained by Michael Pearce and is funded by Rafter.com. Many of the ideas that have inspired Shared Should come from practical usage by the Bookrenter software development team and conversations with Bookrenter developers Andrew Wheeler, Ben Somers, and Philippe Huibonhoa.
Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Michael Pearce, Rafter.com. See LICENSE.txt for further details.