18

I want to have a test in rspec for the existence of a submit button. I am using capybara as well.

I have tried:

should have_tag("input","Submit button")

and

should have_content("Submit, button")

but it either raises an exception or gives false positives.

7 Answers 7

38

These are all good suggestions, but if you want to confirm that it's a button and that it has the right value (for display), you have to be a little more detailed:

page.should have_selector("input[type=submit][value='Press Me']")

I don't know of an existing matcher that does this. Here's a custom RSpec2 matcher I wrote:

RSpec::Matchers.define :have_submit_button do |value|
  match do |actual|
    actual.should have_selector("input[type=submit][value='#{value}']")
  end
end

Here's the RSpec3 version (courtesy @zwippie):

RSpec::Matchers.define :have_submit_button do |value|
  match do |actual|
    expect(actual).to have_selector("input[type=submit][value='#{value}']")
  end
end

I keep it in spec/support/matchers/request_matchers.rb with my other custom matchers. RSpec picks it up automatically. Since this is an RSpec matcher (rather than a Capybara finder), it will work in both feature specs (Capybara) and view specs (RSpec without Capybara).

Feature spec usage:

page.should have_submit_button("Save Me")

View spec usage (after calling render):

rendered.should have_submit_button("Save Me")

Note that if you're in a Capybara request spec, and you would like to interact with a submit button, that's a lot easier:

click_button "Save Me"

There's no guarantee that it's actually a submit button, but your feature specs should just be testing the behavior and not worrying about that level of detail.

2
  • 1
    For RSpec 3, replace the third line with: expect(actual).to have_selector("input[type=submit][value='#{value}']").
    – zwippie
    Nov 21, 2014 at 10:50
  • Thanks! Updated the answer to include that as well. Jan 28, 2015 at 16:43
17

There is a built-in matcher has_button?.

Using RSpec you can have an assertion like

page.should have_button('Submit button')

Or with new RSpec 3 syntax:

expect(page).to have_button('Submit button')
2

I have one (used in cucumber):

Then /^I should see "([^"]*)" button/ do |name|
  should have_button name
end

In negative use: have_no_button

0
1

if your HTML mark up is just something like:

<input type="submit"></input>

Then you can do the following in capybara:

page.should have_selector('input[type=submit]')
0

I have something like:

page.find("#submitButton").visible?
0

Try this

it { should have_xpath("//input[@value='Sign up']") }
-1

Try:

it { should have_selector('input', value: "Submit") }

UPDATE: I suspect this answer may not work as desired in some cases. When I use this to test for the value in other input tags, it seems to pass no matter what the value is.

3
  • This didn't work for me. I ended up using Jim Stewart's answer
    – Neal
    Jul 24, 2013 at 18:41
  • I tried this as well, didn't work. Jim Stewart's answer did work. Oct 25, 2013 at 15:48
  • 1
    value is not a valid key. should be one of :text, :visible, :between, :count, :maximum, :minimum, :exact, :match, :wait
    – JNN
    Mar 3, 2014 at 14:12

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