TestBox : Behavior Driven Development (BDD)
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v4.x
v4.x
  • Introduction
  • Intro
    • Release History
      • What's New With 4.5.0
      • What's New With 4.4.0
      • What's New With 4.3.0
      • What's New With 4.2.x
      • What's New With 4.1.0
      • What's New With 4.0.0
    • About This Book
      • Author
  • Getting Started
    • Overview
    • Installation
      • IDE Tools
  • Primers
    • TestBox BDD Primer
      • Bundles: Group Your Tests
      • Suites: Describe Your Tests
        • Dynamic Suites
      • Specs
      • Expectations
      • Suite Groups
        • Given-When-Then Blocks
      • Life-Cycle Methods
      • Specs and Suite Labels
      • Skipping Specs and Suites
      • Focused Specs and Suites
      • Spies & Mocking
      • Asynchronous Testing
      • Running Tests
      • Reporters
    • TestBox xUnit Primer
      • RefCard
      • Requirements
      • Bundles: Group Your Tests
      • Test Methods
      • Assertions
      • Setup and Teardown
      • Test and Suite Labels
      • Skipping Tests and Suites
      • Spies and Mocking
      • Asynchronous-Testing
      • Running Tests
      • Reporters
  • In-Depth
    • Testing Styles
    • Test Bundles
      • Optional Inheritance
      • Injected Variables
      • Injected Methods
    • Life-Cycle Methods
      • BDD
      • xUnit
      • Annotations
    • Suites, Tests & Specs (Oh My!)
      • xUnit
      • BDD
    • Assertions
      • Custom Assertions
    • Expectations
      • Matchers
      • Not Operator
      • Expecting Exceptions
      • Custom Matchers
    • Output Utilities
    • Running Tests
      • Run Listeners
      • Global Runner
      • Test Browser
      • Bundle(s) Runner
      • Test Runner
      • Directory Runner
      • SOAP Runner
      • HTTP REST Runner
      • ANT Runner
      • NodeJS Runner
    • Reporters
      • Custom Reporters
    • MXUnit Compatibility
  • Mocking
    • MockBox
      • What is Mocking?
      • Our Approach and Benefits
      • Creating MockBox
      • Creating a Mock Object
      • Creating a Stub Object
      • Mocking Methods
        • $() Method
        • $property() Method
        • $getProperty() Method
        • $results() Method
        • $args() Method
        • $throws() Method
        • $querySim() Method
      • Verification Methods
        • $count()
        • $times() or $verifyCallCount()
        • $never()
        • $atLeast()
        • $once()
        • $atMost()
        • $callLog()
        • $reset()
        • $debug()
      • Some Examples
      • Conclusion
    • Mocking Data
  • Code Coverage
    • Introduction
    • Running Code Coverage
    • Configuring Code Coverage
    • Known Behaviors
  • Continuous Integration
    • Introduction
    • Github Actions
    • Gitlab
    • Travis
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  1. Primers
  2. TestBox xUnit Primer

Test Methods

TestBox discovers test methods in your bundle CFC by applying the following discovery rules:

  • Any method that has a test annotation on it

  • Any public method that starts or ends with the word test

// Via inline annotation
function shouldBeAwesome() test{}

/**
* Via comment annotation
* @test
*/
function shouldBeAwesome(){}

// via conventions
function testShouldDoThis(){}
function shouldDoThisTest(){}

Each test method will test the state of the SUT (software under test) or sometimes referred to as code under test. It will do so by asserting that actual values from an execution match an expected value or condition. TestBox offers an assertion library that you have available in your bundle via the injected variable $assert. You can also use our expectations library if you so desire, but that is mostly used in our BDD approach.

function testIncludes(){
       $assert.includes( "hello", "HE" );
       $assert.includes( [ "Monday", "Tuesday" ] , "monday" );
}

Each test function can also have some cool annotations attached to it.

Argument

Required

Default

Type

Description

labels

false

---

string/list

The list of labels this test belongs to

skip

false

false

boolean/udf

A boolean flag that makes the runners skip the test for execution. It can also be the name of a UDF in the same CFC that will be executed and MUST return a boolean value.

PreviousBundles: Group Your TestsNextAssertions

Last updated 7 years ago

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