Awesome
<h1 align="center"> <img src="./docs/images/logo.svg" alt=""> <br> Cucumber </h1> <p align="center"> <b>Automated tests in plain language, for Node.js</b> </p>Cucumber is a tool for running automated tests written in plain language. Because they're written in plain language, they can be read by anyone on your team. Because they can be read by anyone, you can use them to help improve communication, collaboration and trust on your team.
This is the JavaScript implementation of Cucumber. It runs on maintained versions of Node.js. You can quickly try it via CodeSandbox, or read on to get started locally in a couple of minutes.
Looking to contribute? Read our code of conduct first, then check the contributing guide to get up and running.
Install
Cucumber is available on npm:
npm install @cucumber/cucumber
Get Started
Let's take this example of something to test:
First, write your main code in src/index.js
:
class Greeter {
sayHello() {
return 'hello'
}
}
module.exports = {
Greeter
}
Then, write your feature in features/greeting.feature
:
Feature: Greeting
Scenario: Say hello
When the greeter says hello
Then I should have heard "hello"
Next, implement your steps in features/support/steps.js
:
const assert = require('assert')
const { When, Then } = require('@cucumber/cucumber')
const { Greeter } = require('../../src')
When('the greeter says hello', function () {
this.whatIHeard = new Greeter().sayHello()
});
Then('I should have heard {string}', function (expectedResponse) {
assert.equal(this.whatIHeard, expectedResponse)
});
Finally, run Cucumber:
npx cucumber-js
And see the output:
If you learn best by example, we have a repo with several example projects, that might help you get going.
Documentation
The following documentation is for main
, which might contain some unreleased features. See documentation for older versions if you need it.
- Installation
- CLI
- Configuration
- Support Code
- Guides
- Debugging
- Dry run
- ES Modules
- Failing fast
- Filtering which scenarios run
- Formatters for feedback and reporting
- Parallel running for speed
- Profiles for composable configuration
- Rerunning just failures
- Retrying flaky scenarios
- JavaScript API for running programmatically
- Snippets for undefined steps
- Transpiling (from TypeScript etc)
- FAQ
Support
Support is available from the community if you need it.