# -*- encoding : utf-8 -*- # TL;DR: YOU SHOULD DELETE THIS FILE # # This file iwas generated by Cucumber-Rails and is only here to get you a head start # These step definitions are thin wrappers around the Capybara/Webrat API that lets you # visit pages, interact with widgets and make assertions about page content. # # If you use these step definitions as basis for your features you will quickly end up # with features that are: # # * Hard to maintain # * Verbose to read # # A much better approach is to write your own higher level step definitions, following # the advice in the following blog posts: # # * http://benmabey.com/2008/05/19/imperative-vs-declarative-scenarios-in-user-stories.html # * http://dannorth.net/2011/01/31/whose-domain-is-it-anyway/ # * http://elabs.se/blog/15-you-re-cuking-it-wrong # require 'cucumber/rails' # Capybara defaults to XPath selectors rather than Webrat's default of CSS3. In # order to ease the transition to Capybara we set the default here. If you'd # prefer to use XPath just remove this line and adjust any selectors in your # steps to use the XPath syntax. Capybara.default_selector = :css # By default, any exception happening in your Rails application will bubble up # to Cucumber so that your scenario will fail. This is a different from how # your application behaves in the production environment, where an error page will # be rendered instead. # # Sometimes we want to override this default behaviour and allow Rails to rescue # exceptions and display an error page (just like when the app is running in production). # Typical scenarios where you want to do this is when you test your error pages. # There are two ways to allow Rails to rescue exceptions: # # 1) Tag your scenario (or feature) with @allow-rescue # # 2) Set the value below to true. Beware that doing this globally is not # recommended as it will mask a lot of errors for you! # ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false # Remove this line if your app doesn't have a database. # For some databases (like MongoDB and CouchDB) you may need to use :truncation instead. DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction # Stop endless errors like # ~/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p0@global/gems/rack-1.2.1/lib/rack/utils.rb:16: # warning: regexp match /.../n against to UTF-8 string $VERBOSE = nil