Describe a “subject” being specified and tested by the passed function value.
Describe a “subject” being specified and tested by the passed function value. The
passed function value may contain more describers (defined with describe) and/or tests
(defined with it). This trait's implementation of this method will register the
description string and immediately invoke the passed function.
Register a test with the given spec text, optional tags, and test function value that takes no arguments.
Register a test with the given spec text, optional tags, and test function value that takes no arguments. An invocation of this method is called an “example.”
This method will register the test for later execution via an invocation of one of the execute
methods. The name of the test will be a concatenation of the text of all surrounding describers,
from outside in, and the passed spec text, with one space placed between each item. (See the documenation
for testNames for an example.) The resulting test name must not have been registered previously on
this AnyFeatureSpec instance.
the specification text, which will be combined with the descText of any surrounding describers to form the test name
the optional list of tags for this test
the test function
if a test with the same name has been registered previously
NullArgumentExceptionif specText or any passed test tag is null
if invoked after run has been invoked on this suite
Registers shared scenarios.
Registers shared scenarios.
This method enables the following syntax for shared scenarios in a AnyFeatureSpec:
ScenariosFor(nonEmptyStack(lastValuePushed))
This method just provides syntax sugar intended to make the intent of the code clearer.
Because the parameter passed to it is
type Unit, the expression will be evaluated before being passed, which
is sufficient to register the shared scenarios. For examples of shared scenarios, see the
Shared scenarios section in the main documentation for this trait.
Returns an Alerter that during test execution will forward strings (and other objects) passed to its
apply method to the current reporter.
Returns an Alerter that during test execution will forward strings (and other objects) passed to its
apply method to the current reporter. If invoked in a constructor, it
will register the passed string for forwarding later during test execution. If invoked while this
AnyFeatureSpec is being executed, such as from inside a test function, it will forward the information to
the current reporter immediately. If invoked at any other time, it will
print to the standard output. This method can be called safely by any thread.
Register a test to ignore, which has the given spec text, optional tags, and test function value that takes no arguments.
Register a test to ignore, which has the given spec text, optional tags, and test function value that takes no arguments.
This method will register the test for later ignoring via an invocation of one of the execute
methods. This method exists to make it easy to ignore an existing test by changing the call to it
to ignore without deleting or commenting out the actual test code. The test will not be executed, but a
report will be sent that indicates the test was ignored. The name of the test will be a concatenation of the text of all surrounding describers,
from outside in, and the passed spec text, with one space placed between each item. (See the documenation
for testNames for an example.) The resulting test name must not have been registered previously on
this AnyFeatureSpec instance.
the specification text, which will be combined with the descText of any surrounding describers to form the test name
the optional list of tags for this test
the test function
if a test with the same name has been registered previously
NullArgumentExceptionif specText or any passed test tag is null
if invoked after run has been invoked on this suite
Returns an Informer that during test execution will forward strings passed to its
apply method to the current reporter.
Returns an Informer that during test execution will forward strings passed to its
apply method to the current reporter. If invoked in a constructor, it
will register the passed string for forwarding later during test execution. If invoked from inside a scope,
it will forward the information to the current reporter immediately. If invoked from inside a test function,
it will record the information and forward it to the current reporter only after the test completed, as recordedEvents
of the test completed event, such as TestSucceeded. If invoked at any other time, it will print to the standard output.
This method can be called safely by any thread.
Returns a Documenter that during test execution will forward strings passed to its
apply method to the current reporter.
Returns a Documenter that during test execution will forward strings passed to its
apply method to the current reporter. If invoked in a constructor, it
will register the passed string for forwarding later during test execution. If invoked from inside a scope,
it will forward the information to the current reporter immediately. If invoked from inside a test function,
it will record the information and forward it to the current reporter only after the test completed, as recordedEvents
of the test completed event, such as TestSucceeded. If invoked at any other time, it will print to the standard output.
This method can be called safely by any thread.
Returns a Notifier that during test execution will forward strings (and other objects) passed to its
apply method to the current reporter.
Returns a Notifier that during test execution will forward strings (and other objects) passed to its
apply method to the current reporter. If invoked in a constructor, it
will register the passed string for forwarding later during test execution. If invoked while this
AnyFeatureSpec is being executed, such as from inside a test function, it will forward the information to
the current reporter immediately. If invoked at any other time, it will
print to the standard output. This method can be called safely by any thread.
Run a test.
Run a test. This trait's implementation runs the test registered with the name specified by
testName. Each test's name is a concatenation of the text of all describers surrounding a test,
from outside in, and the test's spec text, with one space placed between each item. (See the documenation
for testNames for an example.)
the name of one test to execute.
the Args for this run
a Status object that indicates when the test started by this method has completed, and whether or not it failed .
if any of testName, reporter, stopper, or configMap
is null.
Run zero to many of this AnyFeatureSpec's tests.
Run zero to many of this AnyFeatureSpec's tests.
This method takes a testName parameter that optionally specifies a test to invoke.
If testName is Some, this trait's implementation of this method
invokes runTest on this object, passing in:
testName - the String value of the testName Option passed
to this methodreporter - the Reporter passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itstopper - the Stopper passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itconfigMap - the configMap passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itThis method takes a Set of tag names that should be included (tagsToInclude), and a Set
that should be excluded (tagsToExclude), when deciding which of this Suite's tests to execute.
If tagsToInclude is empty, all tests will be executed
except those those belonging to tags listed in the tagsToExclude Set. If tagsToInclude is non-empty, only tests
belonging to tags mentioned in tagsToInclude, and not mentioned in tagsToExclude
will be executed. However, if testName is Some, tagsToInclude and tagsToExclude are essentially ignored.
Only if testName is None will tagsToInclude and tagsToExclude be consulted to
determine which of the tests named in the testNames Set should be run. For more information on trait tags, see the main documentation for this trait.
If testName is None, this trait's implementation of this method
invokes testNames on this Suite to get a Set of names of tests to potentially execute.
(A testNames value of None essentially acts as a wildcard that means all tests in
this Suite that are selected by tagsToInclude and tagsToExclude should be executed.)
For each test in the testName Set, in the order
they appear in the iterator obtained by invoking the elements method on the Set, this trait's implementation
of this method checks whether the test should be run based on the tagsToInclude and tagsToExclude Sets.
If so, this implementation invokes runTest, passing in:
testName - the String name of the test to run (which will be one of the names in the testNames Set)reporter - the Reporter passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itstopper - the Stopper passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itconfigMap - the configMap passed to this method, or one that wraps and delegates to itan optional name of one test to run. If None, all relevant tests should be run.
I.e., None acts like a wildcard that means run all relevant tests in this Suite.
the Args for this run
a Status object that indicates when all tests started by this method have completed, and whether or not a failure occurred.
if testName is defined, but no test with the specified test name
exists in this Suite
if any of the passed parameters is null.
A Map whose keys are String names of tagged tests and whose associated values are
the Set of tag names for the test.
A Map whose keys are String names of tagged tests and whose associated values are
the Set of tag names for the test. If this AnyFeatureSpec contains no tags, this method returns an empty Map.
This trait's implementation returns tags that were passed as strings contained in Tag objects passed to
methods scenario and ignore.
In addition, this trait's implementation will also auto-tag tests with class level annotations.
For example, if you annotate @Ignore at the class level, all test methods in the class will be auto-annotated with
org.scalatest.Ignore.
An immutable Set of test names.
An immutable Set of test names. If this AnyFeatureSpec contains no tests, this method returns an
empty Set.
This trait's implementation of this method will return a set that contains the names of all registered tests. The set's
iterator will return those names in the order in which the tests were registered. Each test's name is composed
of the concatenation of the text of each surrounding describer, in order from outside in, and the text of the
example itself, with all components separated by a space. For example, consider this AnyFeatureSpec:
import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec
class StackSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec {
Feature("A Stack") {
Scenario("(when not empty) must allow me to pop") {}
Scenario("(when not full) must allow me to push") {}
}
}
Invoking testNames on this AnyFeatureSpec will yield a set that contains the following
two test name strings:
"A Stack (when not empty) must allow me to pop" "A Stack (when not full) must allow me to push"
Returns a user friendly string for this suite, composed of the
simple name of the class (possibly simplified further by removing dollar signs if added by the Scala interpeter) and, if this suite
contains nested suites, the result of invoking toString on each
of the nested suites, separated by commas and surrounded by parentheses.
Returns a user friendly string for this suite, composed of the
simple name of the class (possibly simplified further by removing dollar signs if added by the Scala interpeter) and, if this suite
contains nested suites, the result of invoking toString on each
of the nested suites, separated by commas and surrounded by parentheses.
a user-friendly string for this suite
(Since version 3.1.0) The conversionCheckedConstraint method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. It is no longer needed now that the deprecation period of ConversionCheckedTripleEquals has expired. It will not be replaced.
(Since version 3.1.0) The convertEquivalenceToAToBConversionConstraint method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. It is no longer needed now that the deprecation period of ConversionCheckedTripleEquals has expired. It will not be replaced.
(Since version 3.1.0) The convertEquivalenceToBToAConversionConstraint method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. It is no longer needed now that the deprecation period of ConversionCheckedTripleEquals has expired. It will not be replaced.
The feature (starting with lowercase 'f') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Feature (starting with an uppercase 'F') instead.
The feature (starting with lowercase 'f') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Feature (starting with an uppercase 'F') instead.
This method has been renamed for consistency with ScalaTest's Given, When, and Then methods, which were changed to uppper case
when Scala deprecated then as an identifier, and Cucumber, one of the main original inspirations for FeatureSpec.
This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x.
(Since version 3.1.0) The feature (starting with lowercase 'f') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Feature (starting with an uppercase 'F') instead. This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x
(Since version 3.1.0) The lowPriorityConversionCheckedConstraint method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. It is no longer needed now that the deprecation period of ConversionCheckedTripleEquals has expired. It will not be replaced.
The scenario (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Scenario (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead.
The scenario (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Scenario (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead.
This method has been renamed for consistency with ScalaTest's Given, When, and Then methods, which were changed to uppper case
when Scala deprecated then as an identifier, and Cucumber, one of the main original inspirations for FeatureSpec.
This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x.
(Since version 3.1.0) The scenario (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use Scenario (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead. This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x
The scenariosFor (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use ScenariosFor (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead.
The scenariosFor (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use ScenariosFor (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead.
This method has been renamed for consistency with ScalaTest's Given, When, and Then methods, which were changed to uppper case
when Scala deprecated then as an identifier, and Cucumber, one of the main original inspirations for FeatureSpec.
This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x.
(Since version 3.1.0) The scenariosFor (starting with lowercase 's') method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest. Please use ScenariosFor (starting with an uppercase 'S') instead. This can be rewritten automatically with autofix: https://github.com/scalatest/autofix/tree/master/3.1.x
The styleName lifecycle method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest.
The styleName lifecycle method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest.
This method was used to support the chosen styles feature, which was deactivated in 3.1.0. The internal modularization of ScalaTest in 3.2.0
will replace chosen styles as the tool to encourage consistency across a project. We do not plan a replacement for styleName.
(Since version 3.1.0) The styleName lifecycle method has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version of ScalaTest with no replacement.
A suite of tests in which each test represents one scenario of a feature.
AnyFeatureSpecis intended for writing tests that are "higher level" than unit tests, for example, integration tests, functional tests, and acceptance tests. You can useAnyFeatureSpecfor unit testing if you prefer, however.AnyFeatureSpecis primarily intended for acceptance testing, including facilitating the process of programmers working alongside non-programmers to define the acceptance requirements.Although not required,
AnyFeatureSpecis often used together withGivenWhenThento express acceptance requirements in more detail. Here's an example:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec import org.scalatest._ class TVSet { private var on: Boolean = false def isOn: Boolean = on def pressPowerButton() { on = !on } } class TVSetSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with GivenWhenThen { info("As a TV set owner") info("I want to be able to turn the TV on and off") info("So I can watch TV when I want") info("And save energy when I'm not watching TV") Feature("TV power button") { Scenario("User presses power button when TV is off") { Given("a TV set that is switched off") val tv = new TVSet assert(!tv.isOn) When("the power button is pressed") tv.pressPowerButton() Then("the TV should switch on") assert(tv.isOn) } Scenario("User presses power button when TV is on") { Given("a TV set that is switched on") val tv = new TVSet tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) When("the power button is pressed") tv.pressPowerButton() Then("the TV should switch off") assert(!tv.isOn) } } }Note: for more information on the calls to
Given,When, andThen, see the documentation for traitGivenWhenThenand theInformerssection below.A
AnyFeatureSpeccontains feature clauses and scenarios. You define a feature clause withfeature, and a scenario withscenario. Bothfeatureandscenarioare methods, defined inAnyFeatureSpec, which will be invoked by the primary constructor ofTVSetSpec. A feature clause describes a feature of the subject (class or other entity) you are specifying and testing. In the previous example, the subject under specification and test is a TV set. The feature being specified and tested is the behavior of a TV set when its power button is pressed. With each scenario you provide a string (the spec text) that specifies the behavior of the subject for one scenario in which the feature may be used, and a block of code that tests that behavior. You place the spec text between the parentheses, followed by the test code between curly braces. The test code will be wrapped up as a function passed as a by-name parameter toscenario, which will register the test for later execution.A
AnyFeatureSpec's lifecycle has two phases: the registration phase and the ready phase. It starts in registration phase and enters ready phase the first timerunis called on it. It then remains in ready phase for the remainder of its lifetime.Scenarios can only be registered with the
scenariomethod while theAnyFeatureSpecis in its registration phase. Any attempt to register a scenario after theAnyFeatureSpechas entered its ready phase, i.e., afterrunhas been invoked on theAnyFeatureSpec, will be met with a thrownTestRegistrationClosedException. The recommended style of usingAnyFeatureSpecis to register tests during object construction as is done in all the examples shown here. If you keep to the recommended style, you should never see aTestRegistrationClosedException.Each scenario represents one test. The name of the test is the spec text passed to the
scenariomethod. The feature name does not appear as part of the test name. In aAnyFeatureSpec, therefore, you must take care to ensure that each test has a unique name (in other words, that eachscenariohas unique spec text).When you run a
AnyFeatureSpec, it will sendFormatters in the events it sends to theReporter. ScalaTest's built-in reporters will report these events in such a way that the output is easy to read as an informal specification of the subject being tested. For example, were you to runTVSetSpecfrom within the Scala interpreter:You would see:
TVSetSpec: As a TV set owner I want to be able to turn the TV on and off So I can watch TV when I want And save energy when I'm not watching TV Feature: TV power button Scenario: User presses power button when TV is off Given a TV set that is switched off When the power button is pressed Then the TV should switch on Scenario: User presses power button when TV is on Given a TV set that is switched on When the power button is pressed Then the TV should switch offOr, to run just the “
Feature: TV power button Scenario: User presses power button when TV is on” method, you could pass that test's name, or any unique substring of the name, such as"TV is on". Here's an example:scala> org.scalatest.run(new TVSetSpec, "TV is on") TVSetSpec: As a TV set owner I want to be able to turn the TV on and off So I can watch TV when I want And save energy when I'm not watching TV Feature: TV power button Scenario: User presses power button when TV is on Given a TV set that is switched on When the power button is pressed Then the TV should switch offNote: Trait
AnyFeatureSpec's syntax is in part inspired by Cucumber, a Ruby BDD framework.Ignored tests
To support the common use case of temporarily disabling a test, with the good intention of resurrecting the test at a later time,
AnyFeatureSpecprovides registration methods that start withignoreinstead ofscenario. For example, to temporarily disable the test namedaddition, just change “scenario” into “ignore,” like this:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.ignore import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec class TVSet { private var on: Boolean = false def isOn: Boolean = on def pressPowerButton() { on = !on } } class TVSetSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { Feature("TV power button") { ignore("User presses power button when TV is off") { val tv = new TVSet assert(!tv.isOn) tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) } Scenario("User presses power button when TV is on") { val tv = new TVSet tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) tv.pressPowerButton() assert(!tv.isOn) } } }If you run this version of
SetSpecwith:It will run only the second scenario and report that the first scenario was ignored:
Informers
One of the parameters to
AnyFeatureSpec'srunmethod is aReporter, which will collect and report information about the running suite of tests. Information about suites and tests that were run, whether tests succeeded or failed, and tests that were ignored will be passed to theReporteras the suite runs. Most often the default reporting done byAnyFeatureSpec's methods will be sufficient, but occasionally you may wish to provide custom information to theReporterfrom a test. For this purpose, anInformerthat will forward information to the currentReporteris provided via theinfoparameterless method. You can pass the extra information to theInformervia itsapplymethod. TheInformerwill then pass the information to theReportervia anInfoProvidedevent.One use case for the
Informeris to pass more information about a scenario to the reporter. For example, theGivenWhenThentrait provides methods that use the implicitinfoprovided byAnyFeatureSpecto pass such information to the reporter. You can see this in action in the initial example of this trait's documentation.Documenters
AnyFeatureSpecalso provides amarkupmethod that returns aDocumenter, which allows you to send to theReportertext formatted in Markdown syntax. You can pass the extra information to theDocumentervia itsapplymethod. TheDocumenterwill then pass the information to theReportervia anMarkupProvidedevent.Here's an example
FlatSpecthat usesmarkup:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.markup import collection.mutable import org.scalatest._ class SetSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with GivenWhenThen { markup { """ Mutable Set ----------- A set is a collection that contains no duplicate elements. To implement a concrete mutable set, you need to provide implementations of the following methods: def contains(elem: A): Boolean def iterator: Iterator[A] def += (elem: A): this.type def -= (elem: A): this.type If you wish that methods like `take`, `drop`, `filter` return the same kind of set, you should also override: def empty: This It is also good idea to override methods `foreach` and `size` for efficiency. """ } Feature("An element can be added to an empty mutable Set") { Scenario("When an element is added to an empty mutable Set") { Given("an empty mutable Set") val set = mutable.Set.empty[String] When("an element is added") set += "clarity" Then("the Set should have size 1") assert(set.size === 1) And("the Set should contain the added element") assert(set.contains("clarity")) markup("This test finished with a **bold** statement!") } } }Although all of ScalaTest's built-in reporters will display the markup text in some form, the HTML reporter will format the markup information into HTML. Thus, the main purpose of
markupis to add nicely formatted text to HTML reports. Here's what the aboveSetSpecwould look like in the HTML reporter:Notifiers and alerters
ScalaTest records text passed to
infoandmarkupduring tests, and sends the recorded text in therecordedEventsfield of test completion events likeTestSucceededandTestFailed. This allows string reporters (like the standard out reporter) to showinfoandmarkuptext after the test name in a color determined by the outcome of the test. For example, if the test fails, string reporters will show theinfoandmarkuptext in red. If a test succeeds, string reporters will show theinfoandmarkuptext in green. While this approach helps the readability of reports, it means that you can't useinfoto get status updates from long running tests.To get immediate (i.e., non-recorded) notifications from tests, you can use
note(aNotifier) andalert(anAlerter). Here's an example showing the differences:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.note import collection.mutable import org.scalatest._ class SetSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec { Feature("An element can be added to an empty mutable Set") { Scenario("When an element is added to an empty mutable Set") { info("info is recorded") markup("markup is *also* recorded") note("notes are sent immediately") alert("alerts are also sent immediately") val set = mutable.Set.empty[String] set += "clarity" assert(set.size === 1) assert(set.contains("clarity")) } } }Because
noteandalertinformation is sent immediately, it will appear before the test name in string reporters, and its color will be unrelated to the ultimate outcome of the test:notetext will always appear in green,alerttext will always appear in yellow. Here's an example:Another example is slowpoke notifications. If you find a test is taking a long time to complete, but you're not sure which test, you can enable slowpoke notifications. ScalaTest will use an
Alerterto fire an event whenever a test has been running longer than a specified amount of time.In summary, use
infoandmarkupfor text that should form part of the specification output. Usenoteandalertto send status notifications. (Because the HTML reporter is intended to produce a readable, printable specification,infoandmarkuptext will appear in the HTML report, butnoteandalerttext will not.)Pending tests
A pending test is one that has been given a name but is not yet implemented. The purpose of pending tests is to facilitate a style of testing in which documentation of behavior is sketched out before tests are written to verify that behavior (and often, before the behavior of the system being tested is itself implemented). Such sketches form a kind of specification of what tests and functionality to implement later.
To support this style of testing, a test can be given a name that specifies one bit of behavior required by the system being tested. The test can also include some code that sends more information about the behavior to the reporter when the tests run. At the end of the test, it can call method
pending, which will cause it to complete abruptly withTestPendingException.Because tests in ScalaTest can be designated as pending with
TestPendingException, both the test name and any information sent to the reporter when running the test can appear in the report of a test run. (In other words, the code of a pending test is executed just like any other test.) However, because the test completes abruptly withTestPendingException, the test will be reported as pending, to indicate the actual test, and possibly the functionality, has not yet been implemented. You can mark tests as pending in aAnyFeatureSpeclike this:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.pending import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec class TVSet { private var on: Boolean = false def isOn: Boolean = on def pressPowerButton() { on = !on } } class TVSetSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { Feature("TV power button") { Scenario("User presses power button when TV is off") (pending) Scenario("User presses power button when TV is on") { val tv = new TVSet tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) tv.pressPowerButton() assert(!tv.isOn) } } }(Note: "
(pending)" is the body of the test. Thus the test contains just one statement, an invocation of thependingmethod, which throwsTestPendingException.) If you run this version ofTVSetSpecwith:It will run both tests, but report that
When empty should have size 0is pending. You'll see:One difference between an ignored test and a pending one is that an ignored test is intended to be used during a significant refactorings of the code under test, when tests break and you don't want to spend the time to fix all of them immediately. You can mark some of those broken tests as ignored temporarily, so that you can focus the red bar on just failing tests you actually want to fix immediately. Later you can go back and fix the ignored tests. In other words, by ignoring some failing tests temporarily, you can more easily notice failed tests that you actually want to fix. By contrast, a pending test is intended to be used before a test and/or the code under test is written. Pending indicates you've decided to write a test for a bit of behavior, but either you haven't written the test yet, or have only written part of it, or perhaps you've written the test but don't want to implement the behavior it tests until after you've implemented a different bit of behavior you realized you need first. Thus ignored tests are designed to facilitate refactoring of existing code whereas pending tests are designed to facilitate the creation of new code.
One other difference between ignored and pending tests is that ignored tests are implemented as a test tag that is excluded by default. Thus an ignored test is never executed. By contrast, a pending test is implemented as a test that throws
TestPendingException(which is what calling thependingmethod does). Thus the body of pending tests are executed up until they throwTestPendingException. The reason for this difference is that it enables your unfinished test to sendInfoProvidedmessages to the reporter before it completes abruptly withTestPendingException, as shown in the previous example onInformers that used theGivenWhenThentrait. For example, the following snippet in aAnyFeatureSpec:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.infopending import org.scalatest._ class TVSet { private var on: Boolean = false def isOn: Boolean = on def pressPowerButton() { on = !on } } class TVSetSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with GivenWhenThen { info("As a TV set owner") info("I want to be able to turn the TV on and off") info("So I can watch TV when I want") info("And save energy when I'm not watching TV") Feature("TV power button") { Scenario("User presses power button when TV is off") { Given("a TV that is switched off") When("the power button is pressed") Then("the TV should switch on") pending } Scenario("User presses power button when TV is on") { Given("a TV that is switched on") When("the power button is pressed") Then("the TV should switch off") pending } } }Would yield the following output when run in the interpreter:
Tagging tests
A
AnyFeatureSpec's tests may be classified into groups by tagging them with string names. As with any suite, when executing aAnyFeatureSpec, groups of tests can optionally be included and/or excluded. To tag aAnyFeatureSpec's tests, you pass objects that extend classorg.scalatest.Tagto methods that register tests. ClassTagtakes one parameter, a string name. If you have created tag annotation interfaces as described in theTagdocumentation, then you will probably want to use tag names on your test functions that match. To do so, simply pass the fully qualified names of the tag interfaces to theTagconstructor. For example, if you've defined a tag annotation interface with fully qualified name,com.mycompany.tags.DbTest, then you could create a matching tag forAnyFeatureSpecs like this:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.tagging import org.scalatest.Tag object DbTest extends Tag("com.mycompany.tags.DbTest")Given these definitions, you could place
AnyFeatureSpectests into groups with tags like this:import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec import org.scalatest.tagobjects.Slow class TVSet { private var on: Boolean = false def isOn: Boolean = on def pressPowerButton() { on = !on } } class TVSetSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { Feature("TV power button") { Scenario("User presses power button when TV is off", Slow) { val tv = new TVSet assert(!tv.isOn) tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) } Scenario("User presses power button when TV is on", Slow, DbTest) { val tv = new TVSet tv.pressPowerButton() assert(tv.isOn) tv.pressPowerButton() assert(!tv.isOn) } } }This code marks both tests with the
org.scalatest.tags.Slowtag, and the second test with thecom.mycompany.tags.DbTesttag.The
runmethod takes aFilter, whose constructor takes an optionalSet[String]calledtagsToIncludeand aSet[String]calledtagsToExclude. IftagsToIncludeisNone, all tests will be run except those those belonging to tags listed in thetagsToExcludeSet. IftagsToIncludeis defined, only tests belonging to tags mentioned in thetagsToIncludeset, and not mentioned intagsToExclude, will be run.It is recommended, though not required, that you create a corresponding tag annotation when you create a
Tagobject. A tag annotation (on the JVM, not Scala.js) allows you to tag all the tests of aAnyFeatureSpecin one stroke by annotating the class. For more information and examples, see the documentation for classTag. On Scala.js, to tag all tests of a suite, you'll need to tag each test individually at the test site.Shared fixtures
A test fixture is composed of the objects and other artifacts (files, sockets, database connections, etc.) tests use to do their work. When multiple tests need to work with the same fixtures, it is important to try and avoid duplicating the fixture code across those tests. The more code duplication you have in your tests, the greater drag the tests will have on refactoring the actual production code.
ScalaTest recommends three techniques to eliminate such code duplication:
withFixtureEach technique is geared towards helping you reduce code duplication without introducing instance
vars, shared mutable objects, or other dependencies between tests. Eliminating shared mutable state across tests will make your test code easier to reason about and more amenable for parallel test execution.The following sections describe these techniques, including explaining the recommended usage for each. But first, here's a table summarizing the options:
withFixturewhen most or all tests need the same fixture.withFixture(NoArgTest)withFixture(OneArgTest)instead)withFixture(OneArgTest)BeforeAndAfterBeforeAndAfterEachCalling get-fixture methods
If you need to create the same mutable fixture objects in multiple tests, and don't need to clean them up after using them, the simplest approach is to write one or more get-fixture methods. A get-fixture method returns a new instance of a needed fixture object (or a holder object containing multiple fixture objects) each time it is called. You can call a get-fixture method at the beginning of each test that needs the fixture, storing the returned object or objects in local variables. Here's an example:
package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.getfixture import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec import collection.mutable.ListBuffer class ExampleSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { class Fixture { val builder = new StringBuilder("ScalaTest is designed to ") val buffer = new ListBuffer[String] } def fixture = new Fixture Feature("Simplicity") { Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { val f = fixture f.builder.append("encourage clear code!") assert(f.builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to encourage clear code!") assert(f.buffer.isEmpty) f.buffer += "sweet" } Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { val f = fixture f.builder.append("be easy to reason about!") assert(f.builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to reason about!") assert(f.buffer.isEmpty) } } }The “
f.” in front of each use of a fixture object provides a visual indication of which objects are part of the fixture, but if you prefer, you can import the the members with “import f._” and use the names directly.If you need to configure fixture objects differently in different tests, you can pass configuration into the get-fixture method. For example, you could pass in an initial value for a mutable fixture object as a parameter to the get-fixture method.
Instantiating fixture-context objects
An alternate technique that is especially useful when different tests need different combinations of fixture objects is to define the fixture objects as instance variables of fixture-context objects whose instantiation forms the body of tests. Like get-fixture methods, fixture-context objects are only appropriate if you don't need to clean up the fixtures after using them.
To use this technique, you define instance variables intialized with fixture objects in traits and/or classes, then in each test instantiate an object that contains just the fixture objects needed by the test. Traits allow you to mix together just the fixture objects needed by each test, whereas classes allow you to pass data in via a constructor to configure the fixture objects. Here's an example in which fixture objects are partitioned into two traits and each test just mixes together the traits it needs:
package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.fixturecontext import collection.mutable.ListBuffer import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec class ExampleSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { trait Builder { val builder = new StringBuilder("ScalaTest is designed to ") } trait Buffer { val buffer = ListBuffer("ScalaTest", "is", "designed", "to") } Feature("Simplicity") { // This test needs the StringBuilder fixture Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { new Builder { builder.append("encourage clear code!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to encourage clear code!") } } // This test needs the ListBuffer[String] fixture Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { new Buffer { buffer += ("be", "easy", "to", "reason", "about!") assert(buffer === List("ScalaTest", "is", "designed", "to", "be", "easy", "to", "reason", "about!")) } } // This test needs both the StringBuilder and ListBuffer Scenario("User needs to write tests") { new Builder with Buffer { builder.append("be easy to learn!") buffer += ("be", "easy", "to", "remember", "how", "to", "write!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to learn!") assert(buffer === List("ScalaTest", "is", "designed", "to", "be", "easy", "to", "remember", "how", "to", "write!")) } } } }Overriding
withFixture(NoArgTest)Although the get-fixture method and fixture-context object approaches take care of setting up a fixture at the beginning of each test, they don't address the problem of cleaning up a fixture at the end of the test. If you just need to perform a side-effect at the beginning or end of a test, and don't need to actually pass any fixture objects into the test, you can override
withFixture(NoArgTest), one of ScalaTest's lifecycle methods defined in traitSuite.Trait
Suite's implementation ofrunTestpasses a no-arg test function towithFixture(NoArgTest). It iswithFixture's responsibility to invoke that test function.Suite's implementation ofwithFixturesimply invokes the function, like this:// Default implementation in trait Suite protected def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = { test() }You can, therefore, override
withFixtureto perform setup before and/or cleanup after invoking the test function. If you have cleanup to perform, you should invoke the test function inside atryblock and perform the cleanup in afinallyclause, in case an exception propagates back throughwithFixture. (If a test fails because of an exception, the test function invoked by withFixture will result in aFailedwrapping the exception. Nevertheless, best practice is to perform cleanup in a finally clause just in case an exception occurs.)The
withFixturemethod is designed to be stacked, and to enable this, you should always call thesuperimplementation ofwithFixture, and let it invoke the test function rather than invoking the test function directly. That is to say, instead of writing “test()”, you should write “super.withFixture(test)”, like this:// Your implementation override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = { // Perform setup try super.withFixture(test) // Invoke the test function finally { // Perform cleanup } }Here's an example in which
withFixture(NoArgTest)is used to take a snapshot of the working directory if a test fails, and send that information to the reporter:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.noargtest import java.io.File import org.scalatest._ class ExampleSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec { override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = { super.withFixture(test) match { case failed: Failed => val currDir = new File(".") val fileNames = currDir.list() info("Dir snapshot: " + fileNames.mkString(", ")) failed case other => other } } Scenario("This scenario should succeed") { assert(1 + 1 === 2) } Scenario("This scenario should fail") { assert(1 + 1 === 3) } }Running this version of
ExampleSuitein the interpreter in a directory with two files,hello.txtandworld.txtwould give the following output:Note that the
NoArgTestpassed towithFixture, in addition to anapplymethod that executes the test, also includes the test name and the config map passed torunTest. Thus you can also use the test name and configuration objects in yourwithFixtureimplementation.Calling loan-fixture methods
If you need to both pass a fixture object into a test and perform cleanup at the end of the test, you'll need to use the loan pattern. If different tests need different fixtures that require cleanup, you can implement the loan pattern directly by writing loan-fixture methods. A loan-fixture method takes a function whose body forms part or all of a test's code. It creates a fixture, passes it to the test code by invoking the function, then cleans up the fixture after the function returns.
The following example shows three tests that use two fixtures, a database and a file. Both require cleanup after, so each is provided via a loan-fixture method. (In this example, the database is simulated with a
StringBuffer.)package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.loanfixture import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap object DbServer { // Simulating a database server type Db = StringBuffer private val databases = new ConcurrentHashMap[String, Db] def createDb(name: String): Db = { val db = new StringBuffer databases.put(name, db) db } def removeDb(name: String) { databases.remove(name) } } import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec import DbServer._ import java.util.UUID.randomUUID import java.io._ class ExampleSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec { def withDatabase(testCode: Db => Any) { val dbName = randomUUID.toString val db = createDb(dbName) // create the fixture try { db.append("ScalaTest is designed to ") // perform setup testCode(db) // "loan" the fixture to the test } finally removeDb(dbName) // clean up the fixture } def withFile(testCode: (File, FileWriter) => Any) { val file = File.createTempFile("hello", "world") // create the fixture val writer = new FileWriter(file) try { writer.write("ScalaTest is designed to ") // set up the fixture testCode(file, writer) // "loan" the fixture to the test } finally writer.close() // clean up the fixture } Feature("Simplicity") { // This test needs the file fixture Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { withFile { (file, writer) => writer.write("encourage clear code!") writer.flush() assert(file.length === 46) } } // This test needs the database fixture Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { withDatabase { db => db.append("be easy to reason about!") assert(db.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to reason about!") } } // This test needs both the file and the database Scenario("User needs to write tests") { withDatabase { db => withFile { (file, writer) => // loan-fixture methods compose db.append("be easy to learn!") writer.write("be easy to remember how to write!") writer.flush() assert(db.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to learn!") assert(file.length === 58) } } } } }As demonstrated by the last test, loan-fixture methods compose. Not only do loan-fixture methods allow you to give each test the fixture it needs, they allow you to give a test multiple fixtures and clean everything up afterwards.
Also demonstrated in this example is the technique of giving each test its own "fixture sandbox" to play in. When your fixtures involve external side-effects, like creating files or databases, it is a good idea to give each file or database a unique name as is done in this example. This keeps tests completely isolated, allowing you to run them in parallel if desired.
==== Overriding
Here's a complete example:withFixture(OneArgTest)==== If all or most tests need the same fixture, you can avoid some of the boilerplate of the loan-fixture method approach by using aFixtureAnyFeatureSpecand overridingwithFixture(OneArgTest). Each test in aFixtureAnyFeatureSpectakes a fixture as a parameter, allowing you to pass the fixture into the test. You must indicate the type of the fixture parameter by specifyingFixtureParam, and implement awithFixturemethod that takes aOneArgTest. ThiswithFixturemethod is responsible for invoking the one-arg test function, so you can perform fixture set up before, and clean up after, invoking and passing the fixture into the test function. To enable the stacking of traits that definewithFixture(NoArgTest), it is a good idea to letwithFixture(NoArgTest)invoke the test function instead of invoking the test function directly. To do so, you'll need to convert theOneArgTestto aNoArgTest. You can do that by passing the fixture object to thetoNoArgTestmethod ofOneArgTest. In other words, instead of writing “test(theFixture)”, you'd delegate responsibility for invoking the test function to thewithFixture(NoArgTest)method of the same instance by writing:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.oneargtest import org.scalatest.featurespec import java.io._ class ExampleSpec extends featurespec.FixtureAnyFeatureSpec { case class FixtureParam(file: File, writer: FileWriter) def withFixture(test: OneArgTest) = { // create the fixture val file = File.createTempFile("hello", "world") val writer = new FileWriter(file) val theFixture = FixtureParam(file, writer) try { writer.write("ScalaTest is designed to be ") // set up the fixture withFixture(test.toNoArgTest(theFixture)) // "loan" the fixture to the test } finally writer.close() // clean up the fixture } Feature("Simplicity") { Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { f => f.writer.write("encourage clear code!") f.writer.flush() assert(f.file.length === 49) } Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { f => f.writer.write("be easy to reason about!") f.writer.flush() assert(f.file.length === 52) } } }In this example, the tests actually required two fixture objects, aFileand aFileWriter. In such situations you can simply define theFixtureParamtype to be a tuple containing the objects, or as is done in this example, a case class containing the objects. For more information on thewithFixture(OneArgTest)technique, see the documentation forFixtureAnyFeatureSpec. ==== Mixing inBeforeAndAfter==== In all the shared fixture examples shown so far, the activities of creating, setting up, and cleaning up the fixture objects have been performed during the test. This means that if an exception occurs during any of these activities, it will be reported as a test failure. Sometimes, however, you may want setup to happen before the test starts, and cleanup after the test has completed, so that if an exception occurs during setup or cleanup, the entire suite aborts and no more tests are attempted. The simplest way to accomplish this in ScalaTest is to mix in traitBeforeAndAfter. With this trait you can denote a bit of code to run before each test withbeforeand/or after each test each test withafter, like this:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.beforeandafter import org.scalatest._ import collection.mutable.ListBuffer class ExampleSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with BeforeAndAfter { val builder = new StringBuilder val buffer = new ListBuffer[String] before { builder.append("ScalaTest is designed to ") } after { builder.clear() buffer.clear() } Feature("Simplicity") { Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { builder.append("encourage clear code!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to encourage clear code!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) buffer += "sweet" } Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { builder.append("be easy to reason about!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to reason about!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) } } }Note that the only waybeforeandaftercode can communicate with test code is via some side-effecting mechanism, commonly by reassigning instancevars or by changing the state of mutable objects held from instancevals (as in this example). If using instancevars or mutable objects held from instancevals you wouldn't be able to run tests in parallel in the same instance of the test class (on the JVM, not Scala.js) unless you synchronized access to the shared, mutable state. This is why ScalaTest'sParallelTestExecutiontrait extendsOneInstancePerTest. By running each test in its own instance of the class, each test has its own copy of the instance variables, so you don't need to synchronize. If you mixedParallelTestExecutioninto theExampleSuiteabove, the tests would run in parallel just fine without any synchronization needed on the mutableStringBuilderandListBuffer[String]objects. AlthoughBeforeAndAfterprovides a minimal-boilerplate way to execute code before and after tests, it isn't designed to enable stackable traits, because the order of execution would be non-obvious. If you want to factor out before and after code that is common to multiple test suites, you should use traitBeforeAndAfterEachinstead, as shown later in the next section, composing fixtures by stacking traits. == Composing fixtures by stacking traits == In larger projects, teams often end up with several different fixtures that test classes need in different combinations, and possibly initialized (and cleaned up) in different orders. A good way to accomplish this in ScalaTest is to factor the individual fixtures into traits that can be composed using the stackable trait pattern. This can be done, for example, by placingwithFixturemethods in several traits, each of which callsuper.withFixture. Here's an example in which theStringBuilderandListBuffer[String]fixtures used in the previous examples have been factored out into two stackable fixture traits namedBuilderandBuffer:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.composingwithfixture import org.scalatest._ import collection.mutable.ListBuffer trait Builder extends TestSuiteMixin { this: TestSuite => val builder = new StringBuilder abstract override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = { builder.append("ScalaTest is designed to ") try super.withFixture(test) // To be stackable, must call super.withFixture finally builder.clear() } } trait Buffer extends TestSuiteMixin { this: TestSuite => val buffer = new ListBuffer[String] abstract override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = { try super.withFixture(test) // To be stackable, must call super.withFixture finally buffer.clear() } } class ExampleSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with Builder with Buffer { Feature("Simplicity") { Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { builder.append("encourage clear code!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to encourage clear code!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) buffer += "clear" } Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { builder.append("be easy to reason about!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to reason about!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) buffer += "easy" } } }By mixing in both theBuilderandBuffertraits,ExampleSuitegets both fixtures, which will be initialized before each test and cleaned up after. The order the traits are mixed together determines the order of execution. In this case,Builderis “super” toBuffer. If you wantedBufferto be “super” toBuilder, you need only switch the order you mix them together, like this: And if you only need one fixture you mix in only that trait: Another way to create stackable fixture traits is by extending theBeforeAndAfterEachand/orBeforeAndAfterAlltraits.BeforeAndAfterEachhas abeforeEachmethod that will be run before each test (like JUnit'ssetUp), and anafterEachmethod that will be run after (like JUnit'stearDown). Similarly,BeforeAndAfterAllhas abeforeAllmethod that will be run before all tests, and anafterAllmethod that will be run after all tests. Here's what the previously shown example would look like if it were rewritten to use theBeforeAndAfterEachmethods instead ofwithFixture:package org.scalatest.examples.featurespec.composingbeforeandaftereach import org.scalatest._ import collection.mutable.ListBuffer trait Builder extends BeforeAndAfterEach { this: Suite => val builder = new StringBuilder override def beforeEach() { builder.append("ScalaTest is designed to ") super.beforeEach() // To be stackable, must call super.beforeEach } override def afterEach() { try super.afterEach() // To be stackable, must call super.afterEach finally builder.clear() } } trait Buffer extends BeforeAndAfterEach { this: Suite => val buffer = new ListBuffer[String] override def afterEach() { try super.afterEach() // To be stackable, must call super.afterEach finally buffer.clear() } } class ExampleSpec extends featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec with Builder with Buffer { Feature("Simplicity") { Scenario("User needs to read test code written by others") { builder.append("encourage clear code!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to encourage clear code!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) buffer += "clear" } Scenario("User needs to understand what the tests are doing") { builder.append("be easy to reason about!") assert(builder.toString === "ScalaTest is designed to be easy to reason about!") assert(buffer.isEmpty) buffer += "easy" } } }To get the same ordering aswithFixture, place yoursuper.beforeEachcall at the end of eachbeforeEachmethod, and thesuper.afterEachcall at the beginning of eachafterEachmethod, as shown in the previous example. It is a good idea to invokesuper.afterEachin atryblock and perform cleanup in afinallyclause, as shown in the previous example, because this ensures the cleanup code is performed even ifsuper.afterEachthrows an exception. The difference between stacking traits that extendBeforeAndAfterEachversus traits that implementwithFixtureis that setup and cleanup code happens before and after the test inBeforeAndAfterEach, but at the beginning and end of the test inwithFixture. Thus if awithFixturemethod completes abruptly with an exception, it is considered a failed test. By contrast, if any of thebeforeEachorafterEachmethods ofBeforeAndAfterEachcomplete abruptly, it is considered an aborted suite, which will result in aSuiteAbortedevent. == Shared scenarios == Sometimes you may want to run the same test code on different fixture objects. In other words, you may want to write tests that are "shared" by different fixture objects. To accomplish this in aAnyFeatureSpec, you first place shared tests (i.e., shared scenarios) in behavior functions. These behavior functions will be invoked during the construction phase of anyAnyFeatureSpecthat uses them, so that the scenarios they contain will be registered as scenarios in thatAnyFeatureSpec. For example, given this stack class:import scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer class Stack[T] { val MAX = 10 private val buf = new ListBuffer[T] def push(o: T) { if (!full) buf.prepend(o) else throw new IllegalStateException("can't push onto a full stack") } def pop(): T = { if (!empty) buf.remove(0) else throw new IllegalStateException("can't pop an empty stack") } def peek: T = { if (!empty) buf(0) else throw new IllegalStateException("can't pop an empty stack") } def full: Boolean = buf.size == MAX def empty: Boolean = buf.size == 0 def size = buf.size override def toString = buf.mkString("Stack(", ", ", ")") }You may want to test theStackclass in different states: empty, full, with one item, with one item less than capacity, etc. You may find you have several scenarios that make sense any time the stack is non-empty. Thus you'd ideally want to run those same scenarios for three stack fixture objects: a full stack, a stack with a one item, and a stack with one item less than capacity. With shared tests, you can factor these scenarios out into a behavior function, into which you pass the stack fixture to use when running the tests. So in yourAnyFeatureSpecfor stack, you'd invoke the behavior function three times, passing in each of the three stack fixtures so that the shared scenarios are run for all three fixtures. You can define a behavior function that encapsulates these shared scenarios inside theAnyFeatureSpecthat uses them. If they are shared between differentAnyFeatureSpecs, however, you could also define them in a separate trait that is mixed into eachAnyFeatureSpecthat uses them. For example, here thenonEmptyStackbehavior function (in this case, a behavior method) is defined in a trait along with another method containing shared scenarios for non-full stacks:import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec import org.scalatest.GivenWhenThen import org.scalatestexamples.helpers.Stack trait FeatureSpecStackBehaviors { this: AnyFeatureSpec with GivenWhenThen => def nonEmptyStack(createNonEmptyStack: => Stack[Int], lastItemAdded: Int) { Scenario("empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: " + createNonEmptyStack.toString) { Given("a non-empty stack") val stack = createNonEmptyStack When("empty is invoked on the stack") Then("empty returns false") assert(!stack.empty) } Scenario("peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: " + createNonEmptyStack.toString) { Given("a non-empty stack") val stack = createNonEmptyStack val size = stack.size When("peek is invoked on the stack") Then("peek returns the last item added") assert(stack.peek === lastItemAdded) And("the size of the stack is the same as before") assert(stack.size === size) } Scenario("pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: " + createNonEmptyStack.toString) { Given("a non-empty stack") val stack = createNonEmptyStack val size = stack.size When("pop is invoked on the stack") Then("pop returns the last item added") assert(stack.pop === lastItemAdded) And("the size of the stack one less than before") assert(stack.size === size - 1) } } def nonFullStack(createNonFullStack: => Stack[Int]) { Scenario("full is invoked on this non-full stack: " + createNonFullStack.toString) { Given("a non-full stack") val stack = createNonFullStack When("full is invoked on the stack") Then("full returns false") assert(!stack.full) } Scenario("push is invoked on this non-full stack: " + createNonFullStack.toString) { Given("a non-full stack") val stack = createNonFullStack val size = stack.size When("push is invoked on the stack") stack.push(7) Then("the size of the stack is one greater than before") assert(stack.size === size + 1) And("the top of the stack contains the pushed value") assert(stack.peek === 7) } } }Given these behavior functions, you could invoke them directly, butAnyFeatureSpecoffers a DSL for the purpose, which looks like this: If you prefer to use an imperative style to change fixtures, for example by mixing inBeforeAndAfterEachand reassigning astackvarinbeforeEach, you could write your behavior functions in the context of thatvar, which means you wouldn't need to pass in the stack fixture because it would be in scope already inside the behavior function. In that case, your code would look like this: The recommended style, however, is the functional, pass-all-the-needed-values-in style. Here's an example:import org.scalatest.featurespec.AnyFeatureSpec import org.scalatest.GivenWhenThen import org.scalatestexamples.helpers.Stack class StackFeatureSpec extends AnyFeatureSpec with GivenWhenThen with FeatureSpecStackBehaviors { // Stack fixture creation methods def emptyStack = new Stack[Int] def fullStack = { val stack = new Stack[Int] for (i <- 0 until stack.MAX) stack.push(i) stack } def stackWithOneItem = { val stack = new Stack[Int] stack.push(9) stack } def stackWithOneItemLessThanCapacity = { val stack = new Stack[Int] for (i <- 1 to 9) stack.push(i) stack } val lastValuePushed = 9 Feature("A Stack is pushed and popped") { Scenario("empty is invoked on an empty stack") { Given("an empty stack") val stack = emptyStack When("empty is invoked on the stack") Then("empty returns true") assert(stack.empty) } Scenario("peek is invoked on an empty stack") { Given("an empty stack") val stack = emptyStack When("peek is invoked on the stack") Then("peek throws IllegalStateException") assertThrows[IllegalStateException] { stack.peek } } Scenario("pop is invoked on an empty stack") { Given("an empty stack") val stack = emptyStack When("pop is invoked on the stack") Then("pop throws IllegalStateException") assertThrows[IllegalStateException] { emptyStack.pop } } ScenariosFor(nonEmptyStack(stackWithOneItem, lastValuePushed)) ScenariosFor(nonFullStack(stackWithOneItem)) ScenariosFor(nonEmptyStack(stackWithOneItemLessThanCapacity, lastValuePushed)) ScenariosFor(nonFullStack(stackWithOneItemLessThanCapacity)) Scenario("full is invoked on a full stack") { Given("an full stack") val stack = fullStack When("full is invoked on the stack") Then("full returns true") assert(stack.full) } ScenariosFor(nonEmptyStack(fullStack, lastValuePushed)) Scenario("push is invoked on a full stack") { Given("an full stack") val stack = fullStack When("push is invoked on the stack") Then("push throws IllegalStateException") assertThrows[IllegalStateException] { stack.push(10) } } } }If you load these classes into the Scala interpreter (with scalatest's JAR file on the class path), and execute it, you'll see:scala> (new StackFeatureSpec).execute() Feature: A Stack is pushed and popped Scenario: empty is invoked on an empty stack Given an empty stack When empty is invoked on the stack Then empty returns true Scenario: peek is invoked on an empty stack Given an empty stack When peek is invoked on the stack Then peek throws IllegalStateException Scenario: pop is invoked on an empty stack Given an empty stack When pop is invoked on the stack Then pop throws IllegalStateException Scenario: empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9) Given a non-empty stack When empty is invoked on the stack Then empty returns false Scenario: peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9) Given a non-empty stack When peek is invoked on the stack Then peek returns the last item added And the size of the stack is the same as before Scenario: pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9) Given a non-empty stack When pop is invoked on the stack Then pop returns the last item added And the size of the stack one less than before Scenario: full is invoked on this non-full stack: Stack(9) Given a non-full stack When full is invoked on the stack Then full returns false Scenario: push is invoked on this non-full stack: Stack(9) Given a non-full stack When push is invoked on the stack Then the size of the stack is one greater than before And the top of the stack contains the pushed value Scenario: empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1) Given a non-empty stack When empty is invoked on the stack Then empty returns false Scenario: peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1) Given a non-empty stack When peek is invoked on the stack Then peek returns the last item added And the size of the stack is the same as before Scenario: pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1) Given a non-empty stack When pop is invoked on the stack Then pop returns the last item added And the size of the stack one less than before Scenario: full is invoked on this non-full stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1) Given a non-full stack When full is invoked on the stack Then full returns false Scenario: push is invoked on this non-full stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1) Given a non-full stack When push is invoked on the stack Then the size of the stack is one greater than before And the top of the stack contains the pushed value Scenario: full is invoked on a full stack Given an full stack When full is invoked on the stack Then full returns true Scenario: empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0) Given a non-empty stack When empty is invoked on the stack Then empty returns false Scenario: peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0) Given a non-empty stack When peek is invoked on the stack Then peek returns the last item added And the size of the stack is the same as before Scenario: pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0) Given a non-empty stack When pop is invoked on the stack Then pop returns the last item added And the size of the stack one less than before Scenario: push is invoked on a full stack Given an full stack When push is invoked on the stack Then push throws IllegalStateExceptionOne thing to keep in mind when using shared tests is that in ScalaTest, each test in a suite must have a unique name. If you register the same tests repeatedly in the same suite, one problem you may encounter is an exception at runtime complaining that multiple tests are being registered with the same test name. Although in aAnyFeatureSpec, thefeatureclause is a nesting construct analogous toFunSpec'sdescribeclause, you many sometimes need to do a bit of extra work to ensure that the test names are unique. If a duplicate test name problem shows up in aAnyFeatureSpec, you can pass in a prefix or suffix string to add to each test name. You can pass this string the same way you pass any other data needed by the shared tests, or just calltoStringon the shared fixture object. This is the approach taken by the previousAnyFeatureSpecStackBehaviorsexample. Given thisAnyFeatureSpecStackBehaviorstrait, calling it with thestackWithOneItemfixture, like this: yields test names: -empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9)-peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9)-pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9)Whereas calling it with thestackWithOneItemLessThanCapacityfixture, like this: yields different test names: -empty is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1)-peek is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1)-pop is invoked on this non-empty stack: Stack(9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1)