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@ruby-1.9 Feature: cover matcher Use the cover matcher to specify that a range covers one or more expected objects. This works on any object that responds to #cover? (such as a Range): (1..10).should cover(5) (1..10).should cover(4, 6) (1..10).should_not cover(11) Scenario: range usage Given a file named "range_cover_matcher_spec.rb" with: """ describe (1..10) do it { should cover(4) } it { should cover(6) } it { should cover(8) } it { should cover(4, 6) } it { should cover(4, 6, 8) } it { should_not cover(11) } it { should_not cover(11, 12) } # deliberate failures it { should cover(11) } it { should_not cover(4) } it { should_not cover(6) } it { should_not cover(8) } it { should_not cover(4, 6, 8) } # both of these should fail since it covers 5 but not 11 it { should cover(5, 11) } it { should_not cover(5, 11) } end """ When I run `rspec range_cover_matcher_spec.rb` Then the output should contain all of these: | 14 examples, 7 failures | | expected 1..10 to cover 11 | | expected 1..10 not to cover 4 | | expected 1..10 not to cover 6 | | expected 1..10 not to cover 8 | | expected 1..10 not to cover 4, 6, and 8 | | expected 1..10 to cover 5 and 11 | | expected 1..10 not to cover 5 and 11 |
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197 entries across 96 versions & 14 rubygems