5

Scenaio Outline: Blah de blah When I enter and on the input field Then Everything is good

Examples:
| a | b |
| 1 | 2 |
|    | 3 |

The above scenario throws the following error in BBD Behave Test undefined Please define test

I am not sure how I can come around this. Any suggestions?

3 Answers 3

4

Use Custom Type Conversions described in https://pypi.org/project/parse/

import parse

from behave import given, register_type


@parse.with_pattern(r'.*')
def parse_nullable_string(text):
    return text


register_type(NullableString=parse_nullable_string)

@given('params "{a:NullableString}" and "{b:NullableString}"'
def set_params(context, a, b):
  # a or b will be empty if they are blank in the Examples
  context.a = a
  context.b = b

Now the feature file could look like this,

Given params "<a>" and "<b>"
# Rest of the steps
Examples:
 | a | b |
 | 1 | 2 |
 |   | 3 |
2

It is indeed possible to use empty table cells (as in your example, not using "" or something) if you can go without explicitly mentioning your parameters in your given/when/then steps.

In your example, that would mean that you must not write your step definitions like this

Given two parameters <a> and <b>
...

@given('two parameters {a} and {b}
def step(context, a, b):
  # test something with a and b

but rather like this:

Given two parameters a and b # <-- note the missing angle brackets
...

@given('two parameters a and b') <-- note the missing curly brackets
def step(context): # <-- note the missing function arguments for a and b
  # ...

Now, in order to access the current table row, you can use context.active_outline (which is a bit hidden in the appendix of the documentation).

context.active_outline returns a behave.model.row object which can be accessed in the following ways:

  • context.active_outline.headings returns a list of the table headers, no matter what the currently iterated row is (a and b in the example from the question )
  • context.active_outline.cells returns a list of the cell values for the currently iterated row (1, 2 and '' (empty string that can be tested with if not...), 3 in the example from the question)
  • index-based access like context.active_outline[0] returns the cell value from the first column (no matter the heading) etc.
  • named-based access like context.active_outline['a'] returns the cell value for the column with the a header, no matter its index

As context.active_outline.headings and context.active_outline.cells return lists, one can also do useful stuff like for heading, cell in zip(context.active_outline.headings, context.active_outline.cells) to iterate over the heading-value pairs etc.

1

As far as I know you can't do it. But you can use either an empty string or a placeholder value (e.g. 'N/A') that you can look out for in your step definitions.

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