My page should contain开发者_C百科 a link that looks like <a href="/desired_path/1">Click to go</a>
.
How would you test for that using assert_select? I want to check for the presence of an a
tag with href="/desired_path/1"
. How do you test the attributes of a tag?
Are there any resources to explain how to use assert_select? I read the Guides and API documentation, but didn't figure it out. Are there any recommended better ways of doing this?
I am working in Rails 3 and using the built-in test framework.
Thanks.
In assert_select, you can also use a question mark for the attribute value, and then follow with a string to match.
assert_select "a[href=?]", "/desired_path/1"
There's another way to use assert_select that is more friendly, especially if you want to match a partial string or regexp pattern:
assert_select "a", :href => /acebook\.com\/share/
Here is how you can assert a number of things about a link using assert_select
. The 2nd argument can either be a String or a Regexp to test the href attribute against:
# URL string (2nd arg) is compared to the href attribute thanks to the '?' in
# CSS selector string. Also asserts that there is only one link matching
# the arguments (:count option) and that the link has the text
# 'Your Dashboard' (:text option)
assert_select '.menu a[href=?]', 'http://test.host/dashboard',
{ :count => 1, :text => 'Your Dashboard' }
# Regular expression (2nd arg) tests the href attribute thanks to the '?' in
# the CSS selector string.
assert_select '.menu a[href=?]', /\Ahttp:\/\/test.host\/dashboard\z/,
{ :count => 1, :text => 'Your Dashboard' }
For other ways you can use assert_select
, here are the examples taken from the Rails actionpack 3.2.15 docs (see file actionpack-3.2.15/lib/action_dispatch/testing/assertions/selector.rb
):
# At least one form element
assert_select "form"
# Form element includes four input fields
assert_select "form input", 4
# Page title is "Welcome"
assert_select "title", "Welcome"
# Page title is "Welcome" and there is only one title element
assert_select "title", {:count => 1, :text => "Welcome"},
"Wrong title or more than one title element"
# Page contains no forms
assert_select "form", false, "This page must contain no forms"
# Test the content and style
assert_select "body div.header ul.menu"
# Use substitution values
assert_select "ol>li#?", /item-\d+/
# All input fields in the form have a name
assert_select "form input" do
assert_select "[name=?]", /.+/ # Not empty
end
You can pass any CSS selector to assert_select. So to test the attribute of a tag, you use [attrname=attrvalue]
:
assert_select("a[href=/desired_path/1]") do |elements|
# Here you can test that elements.count == 1 for instance, or anything else
end
The question specifically asks, “How do you test the attributes of [an element]?”
The other answers here use assert_select
in ways that no longer work in current Rails / MiniTest. As per this issue, assertions about attribute contents now use this more Xpath-y ‘match’ syntax:
assert_select "a:match('href', ?)", /jm3\.net/
For anyone using assert_select coming from Rails 4.1 and upgrading to Rails 4.2.
In 4.1 this worked:
my_url = "/my_results?search=hello"
my_text = "(My Results)"
assert_select 'a[href=?]', my_url, my_text
In 4.2 this gave an error: "DEPRECATION WARNING: The assertion was not run because of an invalid css selector. unexpected '(' after '[:equal, "\"/my_results\""]'"
I changed the syntax to this and it worked!:
assert_select 'a[href=?]', my_url, { text: my_text }
Eliots answer above helped me, thanks :)
assert_select 'a' do |link|
expect(link.attr('href').to_s).to eq expected_url
end
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