I've got a handful of specflow tests that look something like this:
Scenario: Person is new and needs an email
Given a person
And the person does not exist in the repository
When I run the new user batch job
Then the person should be sent an email
Scenario: Person is not new and needs an email
Given a person
And the person does exist in the repository
When I run the new user batch job
Then the person should not be sent an email
Except instead of just 2 scenarios, I've got 10 very similar scenarios, all with the type of steps so I want to use a "Scenario Outline". Unfortunately, I'm having a really hard time coming up with a readable way to re-write my steps.
Currently, I've come up with this but looks clunky:
Scenario: Email batch job is run
Given a person
And the person '<personDoes/NotExist>' exist in the repository
When I run the new user batch job
Then the person '<personShould/NotGetEmail>' be sent an email
Examples:
| !notes | personDoes/NotExist | personShould/NotGetEmail |
| Exists | does not | should |
| No Exist | does | should not |
I also considered this, and while it is cleaner it doesn't convey meaning nearly as well
Scenario: Email batch job is run
Given a person
And the person does exist in the repository (is '<personExist>')
When I run the new user batch job
Then the person should be sent an email (is '<sendEmail>')
Examples:
| !notes | personExist | sendEmail |
| Exists | false | true |
| No Exist | does | false |
Does anybody have a better way of parameterizing concepts like "does", "does not", "should", "should not", "has", "has not"? At this point, I'm thinking about leaving the everything as a different scenario because it is more readable.