- Overview
- Transcript
2.10 Tags
Once you start writing a considerable amount of features and scenarios, you’ll want to filter the way you run them. By using tags, you can group them into categories and even run only a specific group at a time.
In this lesson, you learn how to assign one or more tags to your scenarios and how to improve your development workflow by using them.
1.Introduction1 lesson, 03:50
1 lesson, 03:50
1.1Introduction03:50
1.1
Introduction
03:50
2.Acceptance Testing in Ruby with Cucumber13 lessons, 2:19:08
13 lessons, 2:19:08
2.1Unit x Integration x Acceptance tests06:45
2.1
Unit x Integration x Acceptance tests
06:45
2.2Installation & Bootstrap03:25
2.2
Installation & Bootstrap
03:25
2.3Gherkin: Features And Scenarios06:29
2.3
Gherkin: Features And Scenarios
06:29
2.4Basic Cucumber Workflow09:07
2.4
Basic Cucumber Workflow
09:07
2.5Cucumber With Minitest06:46
2.5
Cucumber With Minitest
06:46
2.6Step Definitions06:47
2.6
Step Definitions
06:47
2.7Transforms15:22
2.7
Transforms
15:22
2.8Multi-line Step Arguments05:57
2.8
Multi-line Step Arguments
05:57
2.9Backgrounds and Scenario Outlines10:50
2.9
Backgrounds and Scenario Outlines
10:50
2.10Tags06:45
2.10
Tags
06:45
2.11Hooks15:13
2.11
Hooks
15:13
2.12Configuration And Profiles11:46
2.12
Configuration And Profiles
11:46
2.13Rails + Cucumber + Capybara33:56
2.13
Rails + Cucumber + Capybara
33:56
3.Conclusion1 lesson, 05:44
1 lesson, 05:44
3.1Final Tips05:44
3.1
Final Tips
05:44
I'm a Rubyist/Javascripter/UI designer; occasional speaker; Mac & Arch Linux user.