Posts Tagged ‘rspec’

RSpec Story Runner auf deutsch

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Wir sind gerade mit einem neuen Projekt gestartet - alles richtig “nach Lehrbuch”: kurze Iterationen, Iteration Planning zusammen mit dem Kunden, Behavior Driven Design, User Stories, automatisierte acceptance Tests - all die schönen Dinge die man in so einem modernen agilen Softwareprojekt haben will.

Während der Planung der ersten Iteration haben wir zusammen mit dem Kunden User Stories geschrieben, um sie anschließend direkt in den RSpec Story Runner zu werfen, also As a User I want to upload my photo So that everyone can see my smiley face. Da unsere Kunden deutsch sprechen war das Meeting und dementsprechend auch die Stories auf deutsch, also Als Benutzer will ich mein Foto hochladen können damit alle mein tolles Grinsegesicht sehen können. Damit der Story Runner damit umgehen konnte mussten wir ihm eine neue Sprache beibringen. So geht’s:

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RSpec 1.1 with StoryRunner coming?

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

The latest update from the rspec trunk changed the version.rb file indicating a 1.1 Release Candidate 1 version. Will there finally be a stable RSpec version that has StoryRunner? That’d be a great present for christmas.

Railsconf Europe 2007 Roundup 1 (rspec)

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Last week was RailsConf 2007 in Berlin. Only a couple of days have passed and it already seems so far away. Time for some blogging before everybody forgets that it even took place and nobody’s going to read this :) So here’s the interesting part of the sessions I attended:

A Half-day of Behavior-driven Development on Rails (rspec)

This was the first session on tutorial day and for me one of the most interesting. It basically gave a looong introduction to behavior driven design, how it evolved from things like TDD and who realized what while enganged in which project back in the good old times. One of the interesting parts for me was when they talked about the whole story writing/specification process. I had heard most of it before but it was a good refreshment. The central statement was to write “Software that matters”, and to achieve this, you’d have to get the specs right - as we XPers know this should be done by collecting user stories. The suggested format for such a story was this:

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