move tests to be more behavior driven

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Jonathan Wren 2020-09-19 11:51:39 -07:00
parent d1692ab771
commit 607aa7a5a1
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GPG key ID: 43D5FF8722E7F68A
3 changed files with 24 additions and 21 deletions

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@ -6,29 +6,10 @@ Feature: Core functionality of jrnl outside of actually handling journals
Then we should get no error
Then the output should contain "version"
Scenario: --short displays the short version of entries (only the title)
Given we use the config "basic.yaml"
When we run "jrnl -on 2013-06-10 --short"
Then the output should be "2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good."
Scenario: -s displays the short version of entries (only the title)
Given we use the config "basic.yaml"
When we run "jrnl -on 2013-06-10 -s"
Then the output should be "2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good."
Scenario: Installation with relative journal and referencing from another folder
Given we use the config "missingconfig"
When we run "jrnl hello world" and enter
"""
test.txt
n
"""
And we change directory to "features"
And we run "jrnl -n 1"
Then the output should contain "hello world"
Scenario: --diagnostic runs without exceptions
When we run "jrnl --diagnostic"
Then the output should contain "jrnl"
And the output should contain "Python"
@todo
Scenario: --list outputs to user without exceptions

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@ -33,3 +33,14 @@ Feature: Journals iteracting with the file system in a way that users can see
When we run "jrnl -n 1"
Then the output should contain "This is a new entry in my journal"
And the journal should have 1 entry
Scenario: Creating journal with relative path should update to absolute path
Given we use the config "missingconfig"
When we run "jrnl hello world" and enter
"""
test.txt
n
"""
And we change directory to "features"
And we run "jrnl -n 1"
Then the output should contain "hello world"

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@ -218,3 +218,14 @@ Feature: Custom formats
Given we use the config "bug780.yaml"
When we run "jrnl --short"
Then we should get no error
Scenario: --short displays the short version of entries (only the title)
Given we use the config "basic.yaml"
When we run "jrnl -on 2013-06-10 --short"
Then the output should be "2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good."
Scenario: -s displays the short version of entries (only the title)
Given we use the config "basic.yaml"
When we run "jrnl -on 2013-06-10 -s"
Then the output should be "2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good."