To add a collaborator to this project you will need to use the Relish gem to add the collaborator via a terminal command. Soon you'll be able to also add collaborators here!
More about adding a collaboratormatch matcher
The match matcher calls #match on the object, passing if #match returns a
truthy (not false or nil) value. Regexp and String both provide a #match
method.
"a string".should match(/str/) # passes
"a string".should match(/foo/) # fails
/foo/.should match("food") # passes
/foo/.should match("drinks") # fails
This is equivalent to using the =~ matcher (see the operator matchers
feature for more details).
- Scenarios
-
- string usage
-
- Given
-
a file named "string_match_spec.rb" with:
describe "a string" do it { should match(/str/) } it { should_not match(/foo/) } # deliberate failures it { should_not match(/str/) } it { should match(/foo/) } end
- When
- I run "rspec string_match_spec.rb"
- Then
-
the output should contain all of these:
4 examples, 2 failures expected "a string" not to match /str/ expected "a string" to match /foo/
- regular expression usage
-
- Given
-
a file named "regexp_match_spec.rb" with:
describe /foo/ do it { should match("food") } it { should_not match("drinks") } # deliberate failures it { should_not match("food") } it { should match("drinks") } end
- When
- I run "rspec regexp_match_spec.rb"
- Then
-
the output should contain all of these:
4 examples, 2 failures expected /foo/ not to match "food" expected /foo/ to match "drinks"
Last published over 7 years ago by .