jrnl/features/core.feature
2020-04-10 11:51:56 -07:00

74 lines
2.8 KiB
Gherkin

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."
@skip_win
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 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."