Defining a matcher supporting block expectations
When you wish to support block expectations (e.g. expect { ... }.to matcher
) with
your custom matchers you must specify this. You can do this manually (or determinately
based on some logic) by defining a supports_block_expectation?
method or by using
the DSL’s supports_block_expectations
shortcut method.
Define a block matcher manually
Given a file named “blockmatcherspec.rb” with:
RSpec::Matchers.define :support_blocks do
match do |actual|
actual.is_a? Proc
end
def supports_block_expectations?
true # or some logic
end
end
RSpec.describe "a custom block matcher" do
specify { expect { }.to support_blocks }
end
When I run rspec ./block_matcher_spec.rb
Then the example should pass.
Define a block matcher using shortcut
Given a file named “blockmatcherspec.rb” with:
RSpec::Matchers.define :support_blocks do
match do |actual|
actual.is_a? Proc
end
supports_block_expectations
end
RSpec.describe "a custom block matcher" do
specify { expect { }.to support_blocks }
end
When I run rspec ./block_matcher_spec.rb
Then the example should pass.
Define a block matcher using shortcut
Given a file named “blockmatcherspec.rb” with:
RSpec::Matchers.define :support_blocks_with_errors do
match(:notify_expectation_failures => true) do |actual|
actual.call
true
end
supports_block_expectations
end
RSpec.describe "a custom block matcher" do
specify do
expect {
expect(true).to eq false
}.to support_blocks_with_errors
end
end
When I run rspec ./block_matcher_spec.rb
Then it should fail with:
Failures:
1) a custom block matcher is expected to support blocks with errors
Failure/Error: expect(true).to eq false
expected: false
got: true
(compared using ==)