Thanks Matt. I have been trying out Cucumber and Culerity (Celerity) but rather than jump directly from Cucumber to coding the necessary views, controllers and models required for each scenario, I wanted to drive out the code using RSpec. So I've started to spec a view required by a scenario, and this is where I am confused about how I approach the AJAX aspects of the view in my specs.
> One thing you might want to consider is looking at using a headless > browser like 'celerity' for testing your ajax code. This is quite a > bit more involved for initial setup than using RSpec but will give you > real confidence as you're actually running your javascript inside a > browser. There are quite a few people on this list who are doing this, > using the 'progressive enhancement'[1] pattern to build a version of > the page that works with raw HTML, then decorate it with javascript > behaviour when the page loads. > > I'm not doing this myself in earnest, so I'll say no more, but > hopefully a couple of other people will chime in with some advice. > > [1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_enhancement > > Matt Wynnehttp://blog.mattwynne.nethttp://www.songkick.com > > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-us...@rubyforge.orghttp://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users