Running feature specs with Capybara and Chrome headless July 05, 2017 – Tim Petricola – 2-minute read This article was written before Drivy was acquired by Getaround, and became Getaround EU. Some references to Drivy may therefore remain in the post At Drivy, we’ve been using Capybara and PhantomJS to run our feature specs for years. Even with its issues, PhantomJS is a great way to interact with
I'm a London based Ruby consultant. Visit my website for more information. Introduction In this tutorial, we’ll cover how to do integration tests in Rails using Minitest and Capybara. We’ll also cover how integration tests can sometimes serve as a replacement for controller tests. Prerequisites To follow this tutorial, you’ll need to have Ruby installed along with Rails. This tutorial was tested u
If you’re a Ruby or Rails developer looking for some advice on how to get better at integration testing: congratulations! You’ve reached the highest level of difficulty in all of the areas of the stack you must conquer to become a great Ruby developer. Integration testing is hard, but it doesn’t have to be. This the subtle of this truth lies in the fact that you must be skilled in both the backend
Skip to main content About I am a Chief Technology Officer with expertise in startup and scale up environments who loves building and leading effective teams. I value the customer over the technology, data and scientific experimentation over intuitions, enjoy the learning over being too serious. Currently, I’m a CTO at Creditspring where we created the first ever subscription lending product in th
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