Both avoiding 'should' and repiting 'it' on the tests description improves reading them and also makes all descriptions consistent. Read about cop at http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/rubocop-rspec/RuboCop/Cop/RSpec/ExampleWording
27 lines
664 B
Ruby
27 lines
664 B
Ruby
require 'rails_helper'
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describe ApplicationHelper do
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describe "#author_of?" do
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it "is true if user is the author" do
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user = create(:user)
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proposal = create(:proposal, author: user)
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expect(author_of?(proposal, user)).to eq true
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end
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it "is false if user is not the author" do
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user = create(:user)
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proposal = create(:proposal)
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expect(author_of?(proposal, user)).to eq false
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end
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it "is false if user or authorable is nil" do
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user = create(:user)
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proposal = create(:proposal)
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expect(author_of?(nil, user)).to eq false
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expect(author_of?(proposal, nil)).to eq false
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end
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end
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end |