Sha256: 07b85db8eb6f828257e89f35801aca56f9c15f003cbd880fba82c4ab6fd2720d

Contents?: true

Size: 1.4 KB

Versions: 1

Compression:

Stored size: 1.4 KB

Contents

# cucumber-pride

Take pride in your test output!

Mimics the functionality of `minitest/pride` for Cucumber, in much the same way that `ferrous26/rspec-pride` does for RSpec2.

## How to use cucumber-pride

To use cucumber-pride, you need to call `cucumber` kind of like this:

    cucumber --format Cucumber::Pride::Formatter

Or put those options in your `config/cucumber.yml` file.

## Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

    gem 'cucumber-pride'

And then execute:

    $ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

    $ gem install cucumber-pride

## Tests

The tests are a lie! They don't test cucumber-pride directly, they just produce enough output so that you can visually verify that everything is working. This was much faster than writing actual tests and works just as well in this case.

## Usage

TODO: Write usage instructions here

## Acknowledgements

* Main inspiration, and a fair amount of code, comes from the brilliant [`rspec-pride`](https://github.com/ferrous26/rspec-pride/) gem by [Mark Rade (ferrous26)](https://github.com/ferrous26).

## Contributing

1. Fork it
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`)
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
5. Create new Pull Request

<a name="copyright"/>

## Copyright

Copyright (c) 2012 Peter Vandenberk. See LICENSE.txt for further details.

Version data entries

1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
cucumber-pride-0.0.2 README.md