On 3 Sep 2008, at 14:31, Bart Zonneveld wrote:
On 3 sep 2008, at 15:28, David Chelimsky wrote:
On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 6:56 AM, Bart Zonneveld
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey list,
I found myself trying to verify there are some non-checked
checkboxes in a
template today, and am kinda stumped how to do it :).
A checked checkbox is easy,
have_tag('input[type=checkbox][checked=checked]). But, an
unchecked checkbox
hasn't got the checked attribute at all. And as it so happens, I
want to
test for a number of checked, and a number of unchecked
checkboxes. So, just
testing for input[type=checkbox] would return the number of
checked *and*
unchecked checkboxes..
any ideas?
Let's say you want 10 checked and 5 unchecked. You could do this:
response.should have_tag("input[type=checkbox]", 15)
response.should have_tag("input[type=checkbox][checked=checked]", 10)
It's not perfectly expressive, but a good example name would help:
it "should have 15 checkboxes, 10 checked, 5 unchecked" do
render "/path/to/file"
response.should have_tag("input[type=checkbox]", 15)
response.should have_tag("input[type=checkbox][checked=checked]",
10)
end
WDYT?
Yeah, that's how I ended up doing it. Googled around a bit, and
apparently you cannot do something like input[type=checkbox]
[checked!=checked].
I'll file a ticket for assert_select.
thanks,
bartz
I guess you could also consider putting response.body into a HPricot
object and doing something fancy with that.
IIRC, asset_select isn't using HPricot which seems like a shame - I
seem to remember barking up this tree myself a few weeks ago...
cheers,
Matt
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