assert_select
assert_select(*args, &block)
public
An assertion that selects elements and makes one or more equality tests.
If the first argument is an element, selects all matching elements starting from (and including) that element and all its children in depth-first order.
If no element if specified, calling #assert_select will select from the response HTML. Calling #assert_select inside an #assert_select block will run the assertion for each element selected by the enclosing assertion.
For example:
assert_select "ol>li" do |elements| elements.each do |element| assert_select element, "li" end end
Or for short:
assert_select "ol>li" do assert_select "li" end
The selector may be a CSS selector expression (String), an expression with substitution values, or an HTML::Selector object.
Equality Tests
The equality test may be one of the following:
- true — Assertion is true if at least one element selected.
- false — Assertion is true if no element selected.
- String/Regexp — Assertion is true if the text value of at least one element matches the string or regular expression.
- Integer — Assertion is true if exactly that number of elements are selected.
- Range — Assertion is true if the number of selected elements fit the range.
If no equality test specified, the assertion is true if at least one element selected.
To perform more than one equality tests, use a hash with the following keys:
- :text — Narrow the selection to elements that have this text value (string or regexp).
- :html — Narrow the selection to elements that have this HTML content (string or regexp).
- :count — Assertion is true if the number of selected elements is equal to this value.
- :minimum — Assertion is true if the number of selected elements is at least this value.
- :maximum — Assertion is true if the number of selected elements is at most this value.
If the method is called with a block, once all equality tests are evaluated the block is called with an array of all matched elements.
Examples
# At least one form element assert_select "form" # Form element includes four input fields assert_select "form input", 4 # Page title is "Welcome" assert_select "title", "Welcome" # Page title is "Welcome" and there is only one title element assert_select "title", {:count=>1, :text=>"Welcome"}, "Wrong title or more than one title element" # Page contains no forms assert_select "form", false, "This page must contain no forms" # Test the content and style assert_select "body div.header ul.menu" # Use substitution values assert_select "ol>li#?", /item-\d+/ # All input fields in the form have a name assert_select "form input" do assert_select "[name=?]", /.+/ # Not empty end
Using html text instead of default response
If you have a string containing html and want to assert_select against it, as the doc states you have to pass in an element (HTML::Node) as the first argument. You can do something like this:
doc = HTML::Document.new('<p><span>example</span></p>') assert_select doc.root, 'span'
Escape brackets in selector
If you need to escape brackets in a selector, this is the way to do it:
assert_select "input[type=hidden][name='user[role_ids][]']"
To find a tag with an id or class
assert_select ‘td.highlight’, { :count => 2 }
finds 2 td tags with the highlight class.
assert_select ‘div#special’
finds div with id=special
How not to find an element
assert_select ‘div’, :count => 0
Find a Selected Option in a Drop Down.
You can find the selected option (or options for multiple select inputs) with the following:
assert_select('select#membership_year option[selected]').first['value']
Also works with other markup
such as XML, not only HTML as suggested in the text.
assert_select negative with regex
(also, you can use instance vars)
assert_select "div#event_#{assigns[event].id}", { :count => 0, :html => /something/ }
To find element ant not to find element
If you want to see administration panel:
assert_select "div.admin-panel"
But if you want to NOT see administration panel just write:
assert_no_tag 'div', :attributes => {:class => 'admin-panel'}