module RSpec::Core::Subject::ExampleMethods

Public Instance Methods

should(matcher=nil, message=nil) click to toggle source

When `should` is called with no explicit receiver, the call is delegated to the object returned by `subject`. Combined with an implicit subject this supports very concise expressions.

@example

describe Person do
  it { should be_eligible_to_vote }
end

@see subject

# File lib/rspec/core/subject.rb, line 63
def should(matcher=nil, message=nil)
  RSpec::Expectations::PositiveExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(subject, matcher, message)
end
should_not(matcher=nil, message=nil) click to toggle source

Just like `should`, `should_not` delegates to the subject (implicit or explicit) of the example group.

@example

describe Person do
  it { should_not be_eligible_to_vote }
end

@see subject

# File lib/rspec/core/subject.rb, line 77
def should_not(matcher=nil, message=nil)
  RSpec::Expectations::NegativeExpectationHandler.handle_matcher(subject, matcher, message)
end
subject() click to toggle source

Returns the example group's `subject`.

@note `subject` was contributed by Joe Ferris to support the one-liner

syntax embraced by shoulda matchers:

    describe Widget do
      it { should validate_presence_of(:name) }
    end

While the examples below demonstrate how to use `subject`
explicitly in examples, we recommend that you define a method with
an intention revealing name instead.

@example

# explicit declaration of subject
describe Person do
  subject { Person.new(:birthdate => 19.years.ago) }
  it "should be eligible to vote" do
    subject.should be_eligible_to_vote
    # ^ ^ explicit reference to subject not recommended
  end
end

# implicit subject => { Person.new }
describe Person do
  it "should be eligible to vote" do
    subject.should be_eligible_to_vote
    # ^ ^ explicit reference to subject not recommended
  end
end

# one-liner syntax - should is invoked on subject
describe Person do
  it { should be_eligible_to_vote }
end

@see RSpec::Core::Subject::ExampleGroupMethods#subject @see should

# File lib/rspec/core/subject.rb, line 44
def subject
  if defined?(@original_subject)
    @original_subject
  else
    @original_subject = instance_eval(&self.class.subject)
  end
end

Private Instance Methods

_attribute_chain(attribute) click to toggle source
# File lib/rspec/core/subject.rb, line 83
def _attribute_chain(attribute)
  attribute.to_s.split('.')
end
_nested_attribute(subject, attribute) click to toggle source
# File lib/rspec/core/subject.rb, line 87
def _nested_attribute(subject, attribute)
  _attribute_chain(attribute).inject(subject) do |inner_subject, attr|
    inner_subject.send(attr)
  end
end