I really like the way RSpec is able to separate controller and view tests but have some problems with getting capybara matchers to work in a view test. What i basically try to achieve is sth like this:

describe "some page" do
  it "should render with lots of stuff" do
    assign ..
    render
    rendered.should have_button ('Any button') #or any capybara matcher, really
  end
end

I've seen some posts on the net showing how to configure capybara and rails3 to work smoothly with cucumber or rspec controller tests, but this is not really what I want - that is, testing the views at the lowest level possible.

Also if there's another way to do this (not requiring lots of custom code, couse I know i could write some matchers that extract given selectors from rendered using nokogiri or whatever tool suitable) that'd be great too - using capybara is not a requirement.

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4 Answers

Capybara currently does not work with view specs (there are plans to make it work in the future). The simplest answer is to just add gem 'webrat' to the Gemfile and you're basically set. You might not have have_button but you'll have have_selector, have_tag and similar available.

Btw: as far as I know capybara and webrat can co-exist in one project.

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This one really should be accepted as the answer. :-) – sheldonh Jun 11 '11 at 9:57
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There is now an option to use Capybara matchers (without Webrat baggage) when testing controllers (and views too). I'm using it this way:

describe GlobalizeTranslationsController do

  render_views
  let(:page) { Capybara::Node::Simple.new(@response.body) }

  describe "PUT :update" do
    before do
      put :update
    end

    it "displays a flash notice" do
      page.should have_selector('p.notice')
    end

  end

end

Full code:

References:

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THis is awesome - great answer! – Paul Biggar Dec 20 '11 at 1:39
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Slightly simpler than Pawel's answer, but the gist is the same; the following works for me with rails 3.1.0, rspec 2.6.0, capybara 1.1.1:

page = Capybara::Node::Simple.new( rendered )
page.should have_content( "blah" )
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At the bottom of this page, in the "Webrat and Capybara" section, it looks like Capybara is unsupported for rspec view specs

http://relishapp.com/rspec/rspec-rails

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Correct. If you use Capybara's default driver (:rack_test), writing your view tests as "request tests" with Capybara should still give you reasonably good performance, by the way. It's how I essentially test my views. You just don't get to use assign, so you have a little less control compared to "real" view tests. – Jo Liss Feb 23 '11 at 23:22
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