Hiya, I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if so where? Cheers, Jon
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Jonathan Leighton <j at jonathanleighton.com> wrote:> Hiya, > > I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with > CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I > notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear > to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if > so where?They''re in the story_server directory. We haven''t automated this yet, so what I do is just copy them to a logical place and set up a rake task to put the stories in the same place. On Rails projects, I''ve gotten into the habit of putting them in public/doc/[javascripts|stylesheets] (or similar) and then use this rake task. namespace :stories do desc "Run all the stories (HTML)" task :html do sh "ruby stories/all.rb -fh:public/doc/index.html" end end Now the customers can see the story output at /docs. Of course, so can anybody else, so that might come down before releasing or move to a controller that can manage who gets to see it. But this should give you an idea. Also note that the javascript is 1/2 baked at this point and includes an "add step" (non) feature (which you''ll see in the browser) that doesn''t really do anything. Maybe it''s time to get rid of that for now and standardize on where this stuff goes :) HTH, David> > Cheers, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users >
For another variant, with my CC.rb setup, I have a rake task as follows: desc "Copy RSpec Story HTML includes" task :copy_story_html_includes do if ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''] stories_output_dir = File.join(ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''], ''Stories'') system "mkdir #{stories_output_dir}" system("/bin/cp -r #{RAILS_ROOT}/vendor/plugins/rspec/story_server/prototype/stylesheets/ #{stories_output_dir}") system("/bin/cp -r #{RAILS_ROOT}/vendor/plugins/rspec/story_server/prototype/javascripts/ #{stories_output_dir}") end end And then I just have that as a pre-requisite to my regular spec:stories rake task (since it''ll only do something if we''re in the CC.rb environment): desc "Run all spec stories" task :stories => [ :copy_story_html_includes ] do if ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''] ruby "stories/all.rb --format html > #{File.join(ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''], ''Stories'', ''index.html'')}" else ruby "stories/all.rb --format plain --colour" end end On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 5:44 AM, David Chelimsky <dchelimsky at gmail.com> wrote:> On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Jonathan Leighton > <j at jonathanleighton.com> wrote: >> Hiya, >> >> I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with >> CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I >> notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear >> to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if >> so where? > > They''re in the story_server directory. We haven''t automated this yet, > so what I do is just copy them to a logical place and set up a rake > task to put the stories in the same place. On Rails projects, I''ve > gotten into the habit of putting them in > public/doc/[javascripts|stylesheets] (or similar) and then use this > rake task. > > namespace :stories do > > desc "Run all the stories (HTML)" > task :html do > sh "ruby stories/all.rb -fh:public/doc/index.html" > end > > end > > Now the customers can see the story output at /docs. Of course, so can > anybody else, so that might come down before releasing or move to a > controller that can manage who gets to see it. But this should give > you an idea. > > Also note that the javascript is 1/2 baked at this point and includes > an "add step" (non) feature (which you''ll see in the browser) that > doesn''t really do anything. > > Maybe it''s time to get rid of that for now and standardize on where > this stuff goes :) > > HTH, > David > > >> >> Cheers, >> Jon >> >> _______________________________________________ >> rspec-users mailing list >> rspec-users at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users >> > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users >-- Christopher Bailey Cobalt Edge LLC http://cobaltedge.com
Thanks for both your answers. The copying rake task was pretty useful as I was basically intending to write the same thing after I read David''s message :) Jon On Thu, 2008-07-24 at 09:29 -0700, Christopher Bailey wrote:> For another variant, with my CC.rb setup, I have a rake task as follows: > > desc "Copy RSpec Story HTML includes" > task :copy_story_html_includes do > if ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''] > stories_output_dir = File.join(ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''], ''Stories'') > system "mkdir #{stories_output_dir}" > system("/bin/cp -r > #{RAILS_ROOT}/vendor/plugins/rspec/story_server/prototype/stylesheets/ > #{stories_output_dir}") > system("/bin/cp -r > #{RAILS_ROOT}/vendor/plugins/rspec/story_server/prototype/javascripts/ > #{stories_output_dir}") > end > end > > And then I just have that as a pre-requisite to my regular > spec:stories rake task (since it''ll only do something if we''re in the > CC.rb environment): > > desc "Run all spec stories" > task :stories => [ :copy_story_html_includes ] do > if ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''] > ruby "stories/all.rb --format html > > #{File.join(ENV[''CC_BUILD_ARTIFACTS''], ''Stories'', ''index.html'')}" > else > ruby "stories/all.rb --format plain --colour" > end > end > > > On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 5:44 AM, David Chelimsky <dchelimsky at gmail.com> wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Jonathan Leighton > > <j at jonathanleighton.com> wrote: > >> Hiya, > >> > >> I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with > >> CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I > >> notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear > >> to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if > >> so where? > > > > They''re in the story_server directory. We haven''t automated this yet, > > so what I do is just copy them to a logical place and set up a rake > > task to put the stories in the same place. On Rails projects, I''ve > > gotten into the habit of putting them in > > public/doc/[javascripts|stylesheets] (or similar) and then use this > > rake task. > > > > namespace :stories do > > > > desc "Run all the stories (HTML)" > > task :html do > > sh "ruby stories/all.rb -fh:public/doc/index.html" > > end > > > > end > > > > Now the customers can see the story output at /docs. Of course, so can > > anybody else, so that might come down before releasing or move to a > > controller that can manage who gets to see it. But this should give > > you an idea. > > > > Also note that the javascript is 1/2 baked at this point and includes > > an "add step" (non) feature (which you''ll see in the browser) that > > doesn''t really do anything. > > > > Maybe it''s time to get rid of that for now and standardize on where > > this stuff goes :) > > > > HTH, > > David > > > > > >> > >> Cheers, > >> Jon > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> rspec-users mailing list > >> rspec-users at rubyforge.org > >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > >> > > _______________________________________________ > > rspec-users mailing list > > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > > > > >-- Jonathan Leighton http://jonathanleighton.com/
To handle this I wrote a patch which delivered the styles in the html formatters output. In much the same way as the html spec formatter does. I know Aslak Helles?y has been looking at the editable html stories. Is it acceptable to have stories have styles embedded in the html formatter until Aslak''s editable stories project evolves? I could imagine there are some arguments that the HTML output of stories is something people might want to control the look and feel of, more so than specs as they are seen more frequently by customers. Perhapes by default the styles are embedded in the html formatter but if a CSS stylesheet is passed to the formatter than it will suppress this output and use your custom css. something like: ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.css -- Joseph Wilk, http://www.joesniff.co.uk David Chelimsky wrote:> On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Jonathan Leighton > <j at jonathanleighton.com> wrote: >> Hiya, >> >> I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with >> CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I >> notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear >> to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if >> so where? > > They''re in the story_server directory. We haven''t automated this yet, > so what I do is just copy them to a logical place and set up a rake > task to put the stories in the same place. On Rails projects, I''ve > gotten into the habit of putting them in > public/doc/[javascripts|stylesheets] (or similar) and then use this > rake task. > > namespace :stories do > > desc "Run all the stories (HTML)" > task :html do > sh "ruby stories/all.rb -fh:public/doc/index.html" > end > > end > > Now the customers can see the story output at /docs. Of course, so can > anybody else, so that might come down before releasing or move to a > controller that can manage who gets to see it. But this should give > you an idea. > > Also note that the javascript is 1/2 baked at this point and includes > an "add step" (non) feature (which you''ll see in the browser) that > doesn''t really do anything. > > Maybe it''s time to get rid of that for now and standardize on where > this stuff goes :) > > HTH, > David-- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 8:08 AM, Joseph Wilk <lists at ruby-forum.com> wrote:> To handle this I wrote a patch which delivered the styles in the html > formatters output. In much the same way as the html spec formatter does. > > I know Aslak Helles?y has been looking at the editable html stories. > > Is it acceptable to have stories have styles embedded in the html > formatter until Aslak''s editable stories project evolves? > > I could imagine there are some arguments that the HTML output of stories > is something people might want to control the look and feel of, more so > than specs as they are seen more frequently by customers. > > Perhapes by default the styles are embedded in the html formatter but if > a CSS stylesheet is passed to the formatter than it will suppress this > output and use your custom css. > > something like: > ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.cssThat all sounds reasonable to me. Sensible defaults, yet configurable. Other opinions?> > -- > Joseph Wilk, > http://www.joesniff.co.uk > > > > David Chelimsky wrote: >> On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 7:32 AM, Jonathan Leighton >> <j at jonathanleighton.com> wrote: >>> Hiya, >>> >>> I am trying to use the HTML Story Formatter in conjunction with >>> CruiseControl.rb. I have got it outputting the stories to a file, but I >>> notice there are CSS and JS files linked in the head, which don''t appear >>> to be anywhere in the rspec repository. Are these files available and if >>> so where? >> >> They''re in the story_server directory. We haven''t automated this yet, >> so what I do is just copy them to a logical place and set up a rake >> task to put the stories in the same place. On Rails projects, I''ve >> gotten into the habit of putting them in >> public/doc/[javascripts|stylesheets] (or similar) and then use this >> rake task. >> >> namespace :stories do >> >> desc "Run all the stories (HTML)" >> task :html do >> sh "ruby stories/all.rb -fh:public/doc/index.html" >> end >> >> end >> >> Now the customers can see the story output at /docs. Of course, so can >> anybody else, so that might come down before releasing or move to a >> controller that can manage who gets to see it. But this should give >> you an idea. >> >> Also note that the javascript is 1/2 baked at this point and includes >> an "add step" (non) feature (which you''ll see in the browser) that >> doesn''t really do anything. >> >> Maybe it''s time to get rid of that for now and standardize on where >> this stuff goes :) >> >> HTH, >> David > > -- > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users
David Chelimsky wrote:> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 8:08 AM, Joseph Wilk <lists at ruby-forum.com>wrote:> >> To handle this I wrote a patch which delivered the styles in the htmlformatters output. In much the same way as the html spec formatter does.>> I know Aslak Helles?y has been looking at the editable html stories. Isit acceptable to have stories have styles embedded in the html formatter until Aslak''s editable stories project evolves?>> I could imagine there are some arguments that the HTML output ofstories>> is something people might want to control the look and feel of, more sothan specs as they are seen more frequently by customers.>> Perhapes by default the styles are embedded in the html formatter butif>> a CSS stylesheet is passed to the formatter than it will suppress thisoutput and use your custom css.>> something like: >> ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.css >> > That all sounds reasonable to me. Sensible defaults, yet configurable.Other opinions?>I like that idea. I haven''t wanted to push back any of my changes to the HTML formatter because I knew that Aslak''s goal was to create a customer facing editable HTML page. However, for CI builds it is more useful as a programmer to not have that functionality and inline the backtrace as well (which is something most customer''s wouldn''t want to see.) I vote for inlining the basic styles and providing the way to configure it as suggested above. I think the HTML formatter should include the backtrace and then JS can be used to hide it for a customer-facing version. Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle: http://github.com/bmabey/rspec-story-tmbundle/tree/master/Support/resource/rspec.js (The JS commented out in the file was the original JS that Aslak did for the editable version.) My JS is untested though (and only works for rspec 1.1.4), so I don''t know if you want to incorporate it into rspec, plus it would require the additional lowpro.js lib. The bigger question, I think, is how to handle the required JS files. I don''t think inlining the whole prototype lib is a good solution. So, maybe we could default to generating full paths to the JS files which reside in the rspec lib folder? Then we could allow options to be passed in to modify the JS path, just like the CSS option above? Any other suggestions/ideas of how to handle the external JS files? -Ben
On Sat, 2008-07-26 at 16:38 -0600, Ben Mabey wrote:> Any other suggestions/ideas of how to handle the external JS files?Wasn''t there some Google-hosted JS lib repository launched a little while ago? That could be used for Prototype? Jon -- Jonathan Leighton http://jonathanleighton.com/
> Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? > Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s > and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with > lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle:The current html formatter in trunk no longer requires js to apply styles for failure or pending. So that moves us along to looking at js to hide/show the backtrace. The idea of showing the backtrace in the html has been something I''ve been debating for a while. I did come to conclusion that as a developer I have the build log (or terminal stories are run from) as a source for story errors. Hence I felt I was best left leaving my stories clean for the non-developer users of the stories. I can see from your post that there is a usecase for a more developer centric output. My goal with the default story output was to get a standalone .html file which can then be moved around and played with without having to worry about managing css & js files. Pretty much just as the spec reporter does. Thinking about a developer centric report and maintaining a standalone html report starts to make me think about different formatters/reports. * Default standalone * Custom css -- * Developer centric story report - js & customizable css So this move us to something like: *ruby stories/all.rb --format html *ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.css AND *ruby stories/all.rb --format developer-html I think the first two are important and represent the majority of use cases. If we can separate the idea of js and backtrace output to a separate formatter then we can start work on the first two outputs now (and make story reports usable out of the box). Then we can use a developer formatter as a sounding board for advanced/verbose output (profiling each story aswell perhaps?). Potentially Aslak''s new interface could move to this dev-formatter(or some other formatter) so that we continue development without disturbing those using the simple default output. What do people think? -- Joseph Wilk http://www.joesniff.co.uk Ben Mabey wrote:> David Chelimsky wrote: >> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 8:08 AM, Joseph Wilk <lists at ruby-forum.com> > wrote: >> >>> To handle this I wrote a patch which delivered the styles in the html > formatters output. In much the same way as the html spec formatter > does. >>> I know Aslak Helles?y has been looking at the editable html stories. Is > it acceptable to have stories have styles embedded in the html > formatter until Aslak''s editable stories project evolves? >>> I could imagine there are some arguments that the HTML output of > stories >>> is something people might want to control the look and feel of, more so > than specs as they are seen more frequently by customers. >>> Perhapes by default the styles are embedded in the html formatter but > if >>> a CSS stylesheet is passed to the formatter than it will suppress this > output and use your custom css. >>> something like: >>> ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.css >>> >> That all sounds reasonable to me. Sensible defaults, yet configurable. > Other opinions? >> > > I like that idea. I haven''t wanted to push back any of my changes to > the > HTML formatter because I knew that Aslak''s goal was to create a > customer > facing editable HTML page. > > However, for CI builds it is more useful as a programmer to not have > that > functionality and inline the backtrace as well (which is something most > customer''s wouldn''t want to see.) I vote for inlining the basic styles > and providing the way to configure it as suggested above. I think the > HTML formatter should include the backtrace and then JS can be used to > hide it for a customer-facing version. > > Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? > Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s > and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with > lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle: > http://github.com/bmabey/rspec-story-tmbundle/tree/master/Support/resource/rspec.js > (The JS commented out in the file was the original JS that Aslak did for > the editable version.) > My JS is untested though (and only works for rspec 1.1.4), so I don''t > know if you want to incorporate it into rspec, plus it would require the > additional lowpro.js lib. > > The bigger question, I think, is how to handle the required JS files. I > don''t think inlining the whole prototype lib is a good solution. So, > maybe we could default to generating full paths to the JS files which > reside in the rspec lib folder? Then we could allow options to be > passed > in to modify the JS path, just like the CSS option above? > > Any other suggestions/ideas of how to handle the external JS files? > > -Ben-- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Joseph Wilk wrote:>> Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? >> Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s >> and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with >> lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle: >> > > The current html formatter in trunk no longer requires js to apply > styles for failure or pending. >Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story?> So that moves us along to looking at js to hide/show the backtrace. > > The idea of showing the backtrace in the html has been something I''ve > been debating for a while. I did come to conclusion that as a developer > I have the build log (or terminal stories are run from) as a source for > story errors. Hence I felt I was best left leaving my stories clean for > the non-developer users of the stories. >This is true for regular development, although having the backtrace can also be helpful in the HTML version if you use that as your main formatter (i.e. in textmate.) The real use for the backtrace, IMO, is for providing a decent build artifact for CI. Otherwise you could have to look through your test.log file and try to match it up.. which would be no fun.> I can see from your post that there is a usecase for a more developer > centric output. > > My goal with the default story output was to get a standalone .html file > which can then be moved around and played with without having to worry > about managing css & js files. Pretty much just as the spec reporter > does. > > Thinking about a developer centric report and maintaining a standalone > html report starts to make me think about different formatters/reports. > > * Default standalone > * Custom css > -- > * Developer centric story report - js & customizable css > > So this move us to something like: > > *ruby stories/all.rb --format html > *ruby stories/all.rb --format html --css my_own.css > > AND > > *ruby stories/all.rb --format developer-html > > I think the first two are important and represent the majority of use > cases. > If we can separate the idea of js and backtrace output to a separate > formatter then we can start work on the first two outputs now (and make > story reports usable out of the box). > > Then we can use a developer formatter as a sounding board for > advanced/verbose output (profiling each story aswell perhaps?). > Potentially Aslak''s new interface could move to this dev-formatter(or > some other formatter) so that we continue development without disturbing > those using the simple default output. > > What do people think? >I really like that idea, and I agree with you that these two would cover most use cases. -Ben
> Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until > all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story?Exactly. It made the html much nicer but did loose that per scenario output. I added a progress bar formatter so I could still get that direct scenario feedback, be it just a green dot or red F :) David are you happy with this html and dev-html formatter direction? If so I''ll move this issue to lighthouse and start adding my patch. Ben Mabey wrote:> Joseph Wilk wrote: >>> Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? >>> Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s >>> and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with >>> lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle: >>> >> >> The current html formatter in trunk no longer requires js to apply >> styles for failure or pending. >> > > Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until > all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story? >> So that moves us along to looking at js to hide/show the backtrace. >> >> The idea of showing the backtrace in the html has been something I''ve >> been debating for a while. I did come to conclusion that as a developer >> I have the build log (or terminal stories are run from) as a source for >> story errors. Hence I felt I was best left leaving my stories clean for >> the non-developer users of the stories. >> > > This is true for regular development, although having the backtrace can > also be helpful in the HTML version if you use that as your main > formatter (i.e. in textmate.) > The real use for the backtrace, IMO, is for providing a decent build > artifact for CI. Otherwise you could have to look through your test.log > file and try to match it up.. which would be no fun. >> >> AND >> advanced/verbose output (profiling each story aswell perhaps?). >> Potentially Aslak''s new interface could move to this dev-formatter(or >> some other formatter) so that we continue development without disturbing >> those using the simple default output. >> >> What do people think? >> > > I really like that idea, and I agree with you that these two would cover > most use cases. > > -Ben-- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
On Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 2:28 PM, Joseph Wilk <lists at ruby-forum.com> wrote:>> Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until >> all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story? > > Exactly. It made the html much nicer but did loose that per scenario > output. I added a progress bar formatter so I could still get that > direct scenario feedback, be it just a green dot or red F :) > > David are you happy with this html and dev-html formatter direction? If > so I''ll move this issue to lighthouse and start adding my patch.Sorry for the long silence on this - just got back from my first "computer-free" vacation in some years. I recommend it to everyone (though some may wish to prepare themselves for assorted withdrawal symptoms). Anyhow - I''m not convinced one way or the other as to whether two formatters for different audiences is better than a single html formatter w/ some simple js to reveal backtraces. I can tell you from my experience with FitNesse that the backtraces were sometimes life-saving and sometimes simply annoying. Having the option to show it but have it hidden on load would be nice. Anybody else wanna chime in on this?> > > > Ben Mabey wrote: >> Joseph Wilk wrote: >>>> Which brings up the other question.. how do we want to handle the JS? >>>> Due to how the HTML is written out JS is required to change the Story''s >>>> and Scenario''s styles when a step fails or is pending. I did this with >>>> lowpro for the rspec-story-tmbundle: >>>> >>> >>> The current html formatter in trunk no longer requires js to apply >>> styles for failure or pending. >>> >> >> Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until >> all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story? >>> So that moves us along to looking at js to hide/show the backtrace. >>> >>> The idea of showing the backtrace in the html has been something I''ve >>> been debating for a while. I did come to conclusion that as a developer >>> I have the build log (or terminal stories are run from) as a source for >>> story errors. Hence I felt I was best left leaving my stories clean for >>> the non-developer users of the stories. >>> >> >> This is true for regular development, although having the backtrace can >> also be helpful in the HTML version if you use that as your main >> formatter (i.e. in textmate.) >> The real use for the backtrace, IMO, is for providing a decent build >> artifact for CI. Otherwise you could have to look through your test.log >> file and try to match it up.. which would be no fun. >>> >>> AND >>> advanced/verbose output (profiling each story aswell perhaps?). >>> Potentially Aslak''s new interface could move to this dev-formatter(or >>> some other formatter) so that we continue development without disturbing >>> those using the simple default output. >>> >>> What do people think? >>> >> >> I really like that idea, and I agree with you that these two would cover >> most use cases. >> >> -Ben > > -- > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users >
Hello, Hope you had a nice break David. I''ve been thinking about hidden backtraces in the html stories some more and I think having them carries little to no impact for the non-tech consumers of the stories. I think its similar to how we use Nagios. The business like to look at the nice red and green lights. When things go wrong they don''t care why, they care if its red. The QA people of the other hand can use the same interface to see what went wrong. It feels a similar situation to that of the html stories. The key thing for me is that we still try and make the html story reports standalone. Fortunately a simple show hide is not going to require any external js libs. I''m happy to add some JS to my current patch to show/hide the backtrace when there is an error. As for a separate Formatter for developers, with the JS/backtrace dealt with perhaps until something dramatic comes about that swings the discussion we procrastinate? -- Joseph Wilk, http://www.joesniff.co.uk David Chelimsky wrote:> On Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 2:28 PM, Joseph Wilk <lists at ruby-forum.com> > wrote: >>> Ahh, good to know. Does that mean that the HTML isn''t outputted until >>> all of the scenario''s are ran for a particular story? >> >> Exactly. It made the html much nicer but did loose that per scenario >> output. I added a progress bar formatter so I could still get that >> direct scenario feedback, be it just a green dot or red F :) >> >> David are you happy with this html and dev-html formatter direction? If >> so I''ll move this issue to lighthouse and start adding my patch. > > Sorry for the long silence on this - just got back from my first > "computer-free" vacation in some years. I recommend it to everyone > (though some may wish to prepare themselves for assorted withdrawal > symptoms). > > Anyhow - I''m not convinced one way or the other as to whether two > formatters for different audiences is better than a single html > formatter w/ some simple js to reveal backtraces. I can tell you from > my experience with FitNesse that the backtraces were sometimes > life-saving and sometimes simply annoying. Having the option to show > it but have it hidden on load would be nice. > > Anybody else wanna chime in on this?-- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.