TestBox : Behavior Driven Development (BDD)
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v3.x
v3.x
  • Introduction
  • Intro
    • Release History
      • What's New With 3.2.0
      • What's New With 3.1.0
      • What's New With 3.0.0
    • 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
      • xUnit
      • BDD
      • 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
      • System Requirements
      • Installing 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
  • Code Coverage
    • Introduction
    • Running Code Coverage
    • Configuring Code Coverage
    • Known Behaviors
  • Continuous Integration
    • Introduction
    • Gitlab
    • Travis
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  1. Primers
  2. TestBox BDD Primer

Skipping Specs and Suites

Specs and suites can be skipped from execution by prefixing certain functions with the letter x or by using the skip argument in each of them. The reporters will show that these suites or specs where skipped from execution. The functions you can prefix are:

  • it()

  • describe()

  • story()

  • given()

  • when()

  • then()

  • feature()

xdescribe("A spec", function() {
     it("was just skipped, so I will never execute", function() {
          coldbox = 0;
          coldbox++;

          expect( coldbox ).toBe( 1 );
     });
});

describe("A spec", function() {
     it("is just a closure, so it can contain any code", function() {
          coldbox = 0;
          coldbox++;

          expect( coldbox ).toBe( 1 );
     });

     xit("can have more than one expectation, but I am skipped", function() {
          coldbox = 0;
          coldbox++;

          expect( coldbox ).toBe( 1 );
          expect( coldbox ).toBeTrue();
     });
});

Skip Argument

The skip argument can be a boolean value or a closure. If the value is true then the suite or spec is skipped. If the return value of the closure is true then the suite or spec is skipped. Using the closure approach allows you to dynamically at runtime figure out if the desired spec or suite is skipped. This is such a great way to prepare tests for different CFML engines.

describe(title="A railo suite", body=function() {
     it("can be expected to run", function() {
          coldbox = 0;
          coldbox++;

          expect( coldbox ).toBe( 1 );
     });

     it(title="can have more than one expectation and another skip closure", body=function() {
          coldbox = 0;
          coldbox++;

          expect( coldbox ).toBe( 1 );
          expect( coldbox ).toBeTrue();

     },skip=function(){
          return false;
     });

},skip=function(){
     return !structKeyExists( server, "railo" );
});
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Last updated 7 years ago

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