Feature: Basic reading and writing to a journal Scenario: Loading a sample journal Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl -n 2" Then we should get no error and the output should be """ 2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry. | Everything is alright 2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good. | But I'm better. """ Scenario: Writing an entry from command line Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl 23 july 2013: A cold and stormy day. I ate crisps on the sofa." Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -n 1" Then the output should contain "2013-07-23 09:00 A cold and stormy day." Scenario: Writing an empty entry from the editor Given we use the config "editor.yaml" When we open the editor and enter "" Then we should see the message "[Nothing saved to file]" Scenario: Writing an empty entry from the command line Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl" and enter "" Then we should get no error And the output should be """ """ Scenario: Filtering for dates 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." When we run "jrnl -on 'june 6 2013' --short" Then the output should be "2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good." Scenario: Emoji support Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl 23 july 2013: 🌞 sunny day. Saw an 🐘" Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -n 1" Then the output should contain "🌞" and the output should contain "🐘" Scenario: Writing an entry at the prompt Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl" and enter "25 jul 2013: I saw Elvis. He's alive." Then we should get no error and the journal should contain "[2013-07-25 09:00] I saw Elvis." and the journal should contain "He's alive." Scenario: Displaying the version number Given we use the config "basic.yaml" When we run "jrnl -v" 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."