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101 lines
2.8 KiB
Text
101 lines
2.8 KiB
Text
= factory_girl
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== Defining factories
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# This will guess the User class
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Factory.define :user do |u|
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u.first_name 'John'
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u.last_name 'Doe'
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u.admin false
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end
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# This will use the User class (Admin would have been guessed)
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Factory.define :admin, :class => User do |u|
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u.first_name 'Admin'
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u.last_name 'User'
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u.admin true
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end
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It is recommended that you create a test/factories.rb file and define your
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factories there. This file can be included from test_helper or directly from
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your test files. Don't forget:
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require 'factory_girl'
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== Lazy Attributes
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Most attributes can be added using static values that are evaluated when the
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factory is defined, but some attributes (such as associations and other
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attributes that must be dynamically generated) will need values assigned each
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time an instance is generated. These "lazy" attributes can be added by passing
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a block instead of a parameter:
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Factory.define :user do |u|
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# ...
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u.activation_code { User.generate_activation_code }
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end
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== Dependent Attributes
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Some attributes may need to be generated based on the values of other
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attributes. This can be done by calling the attribute name on
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Factory::AttributeProxy, which is yielded to lazy attribute blocks:
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Factory.define :user do |u|
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u.first_name 'Joe'
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u.last_name 'Blow'
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u.email {|a| "#{a.first_name}.#{a.last_name}@example.com".downcase }
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end
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Factory(:user, :last_name => 'Doe').email
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# => "joe.doe@example.com"
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== Associations
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Associated instances can be generated by using the association method when
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defining a lazy attribute:
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Factory.define :post do |p|
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# ...
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p.author {|author| author.association(:user, :last_name => 'Writely') }
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end
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When using the association method, the same build strategy (build, create, or attributes_for) will be used for all generated instances:
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# Builds and saves a User and a Post
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post = Factory(:post)
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post.new_record? # => false
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post.author.new_record # => false
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# Builds but does not save a User and a Post
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Factory.build(:post)
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post.new_record? # => true
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post.author.new_record # => true
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== Sequences
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Unique values in a specific format (for example, e-mail addresses) can be
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generated using sequences. Sequences are defined by calling Factory.sequence,
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and values in a sequence are generated by calling Factory.next:
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# Defines a new sequence
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Factory.sequence :email do |n|
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"person#{n}@example.com"
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end
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Factory.next :email
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# => "person1@example.com"
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Factory.next :email
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# => "person2@example.com"
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== Using factories
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# Build and save a User instance
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Factory(:user)
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# Build a User instance and override the first_name property
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Factory.build(:user, :first_name => 'Joe')
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# Return an attributes Hash that can be used to build a User instance
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attrs = Factory.attributes_for(:user)
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