If I didn't already have a Stack Overflow account, I would have made one JUST to write this post. I urge you to re-read @Jack Kinsella's answer
I got in to BDD about 3 months ago, fell in love with it, and quickly started using Cucumber for everything. I forced it in to every project, no matter what
Recently, I've had to learn a yet another language, and my first step was to get the testing environment set up. I came across these 3 articles:
Honestly, their content isn't that important; what's important is that they hinted at an overall idea. I began to suspect that I'd been using Cucumber wrong all along, and I went hunting for answers. This morning I found your SO question, and @Jack Kinsella's blog post
@Jack comes right out and says the idea I believe those articles were tentatively circling. He also gives me the language I was looking for. I now consider his article to be the final word on the subject :)
According to him, what we've ACTUALLY been using Cucumber for is "integration testing". I never understood what that meant before
Unit testing:
How the code works internally. Math.Add(1,1) should be 2, but the website user doesn't care. Just give me a web page!
-> Use RSpec or an equivalent
Integration testing:
How different branches of the code work together to make the website. I type my name and click Log In, and should be taken to the Home page
-> ALSO use RSpec!
(Inside of RSpec, add whatever you need to handle multiple-technologies-touching-eachother. For the code-to-webBrowsers example: Capybara, Watir, etc)
Acceptance testing:
Many of us don't need it. Someone signed a contract with you saying "I'm going to write 'I can add subpages to my micro-site.' in a text file". You write me code that makes it turn green
-> Use Cucumber. Only if you have to do this kind of testing. Which you almost certainly don't
What an elegant solution. No 2nd testing environment. No steps directory and swarm of extra files!
I had a moment of "But I love how Cucumber seperates English from the code". Regular bdd does that too. "rspec --format nested" or Jasmine test results
@Jack is right. Cucumber isn't adding anything; not the way we've been using it. And it's costing a lot. To quote him:
Why not admit to yourself that you don’t do acceptance testing and that you do not need it in your projects? Swap Cucumber for pure integration tests using Capybara, and you’ll be surprised by how much more productive you can be