jrnl/tests/bdd/features/change_time.feature
2022-04-23 16:57:53 -05:00

163 lines
6.6 KiB
Gherkin

Feature: Change entry times in journal
Scenario Outline: Change time flag changes single entry timestamp
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
And we use the password "test" if prompted
When we run "jrnl -1"
Then the output should contain "2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally"
When we run "jrnl -1 --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30'"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-29 11:11 Entry the first.
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2022-04-23 10:30 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_encrypted.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with nonsense input changes nothing
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time now asdfasdf"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-29 11:11 Entry the first.
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
| basic_dayone.yaml |
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with tag only changes tagged entries
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' @ipsum"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
2022-04-23 10:30 Entry the first.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with multiple tags changes all entries matching any of the tags
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' @ipsum @tagthree"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2022-04-23 10:30 Entry the first.
2022-04-23 10:30 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -and changes boolean AND of tagged entries
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' -and @tagone @tagtwo"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
2022-04-23 10:30 Entry the first.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -not does not change entries from given tag
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' @tagone -not @ipsum"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-29 11:11 Entry the first.
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2022-04-23 10:30 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -from search operator only changes entries since that date
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' -from 2020-09-01"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-29 11:11 Entry the first.
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2022-04-23 10:30 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -to only changes entries up to specified date
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' -to 2020-08-31"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
2022-04-23 10:30 Entry the first.
2022-04-23 10:30 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -starred only changes starred entries
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' -starred"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-29 11:11 Entry the first.
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
2022-04-23 10:30 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo
Scenario Outline: Change time flag with -contains only changes entries containing expression
Given we use the config "<config_file>"
When we run "jrnl --change-time '2022-04-23 10:30' -contains dignissim"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2020-08-31 14:32 A second entry in what I hope to be a long series.
2020-09-24 09:14 The third entry finally after weeks without writing.
2022-04-23 10:30 Entry the first.
Examples: Configs
| config_file |
| basic_onefile.yaml |
| basic_folder.yaml |
# | basic_dayone.yaml | @todo