3

I read on this slide about RSpec best practices ( http://blog.bandzarewicz.com/slides/krug-the-perfect-rspec/#19 ) and many other places , that it is best practice to have only one expectation with one "it" . For example :

describe UsersController, '#create' do
  # setup spec...
  it 'creates a new user' do
    should assign_to(:user).with(user)
    should set_the_flash
    should respond_with(:redirect)
    should redirect_to(admin_user_path(user))
  end
end

vs.

describe UsersController, '#create' do
  # setup spec...
  it { should assign_to(:user).with(user) }
  it { should set_the_flash }
  it { should respond_with(:redirect) }
  it { should redirect_to(admin_user_path(user)) }
end

Why is it best practise to have only one expectation with one "it" ?

1
  • Well, "Unit testing" is a self explanatory expression Jul 25, 2012 at 7:26

1 Answer 1

3

Because this approach is better for documentation. Try rspec --format documentation. And another reason, with one should per it, you can always see which test is failing.

1
  • I didn't think about the documentation output . Thank you .
    – Emil
    Jul 25, 2012 at 9:11

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