I have an assertion to check a key in an array in my CodeCeption tests. The test calls a REST API and checks the returned response.
I have this command:
$I->assertContains("key", $resp);
The output is:
Step Assert contains "key",{"key":"0m-5m","price":10000,"text":"۰ تا ۵ دقیقه"}
Fail Failed asserting that an array contains 'key'.
But when I change the command to the following, everything works fine:
$I->assertInternalType("string", $resp["key"]);
This behavior shows that there is a key named key in my $resp object.
I supposed that the cause may be the UTF-8 characters, since I've been using asserContains a hundred times before and it works as a charm.
Any idea how to solve the issue?
I tried another assert method of CodeCeption which worked fine for me.
$I->assertArrayHasKey("key", $resp);
Related
I'ts my first tme using Cypress and I almost finalized my first test. But to do so I need to assert against a unknown number. Let me explain:
When the test starts, a random number of elements is generated and I shouldn't have control on such a number (is a requirement). So, I'm trying to get such number in this way:
var previousElems = cy.get('.list-group-item').its('length');
I'm not really sure if I'm getting the right data, since I can not log it (the "cypress console" shows me "[Object]" when I print it). But let's say such line returns (5) to exemplify.
During the test, I simulate a user creating extra elements (2) and removing an (1) element. Let's say the user just creates one single extra element.
So, at the end os the test, I need to check if the number of eements with the same class are equals to (5+2-1) = (6) elements. I'm doing it in this way:
cy.get('.list-group-item').its('length').should('eq', (previousTasks + 1));
But I get the following message:
CypressError: Timed out retrying: expected 10 to equal '[object Object]1'
So, how can I log and assert this?
Thanks in advance,
PD: I also tryed:
var previousTasks = (Cypress.$("ul").children)? Cypress.$("ul").children.length : 0;
But it always returns a fixed number (2), even if I put a wait before to make sure all the items are fully loaded.
I also tryed the same with childNodes but it always return 0.
Your problem stems from the fact that Cypress test code is run all at once before the test starts. Commands are queued to be run later, and so storing variables as in your example will not work. This is why you keep getting objects instead of numbers; the object you're getting is called a chainer, and is used to allow you to chain commands off other commands, like so: cy.get('#someSelector').should('...');
Cypress has a way to get around this though; if you need to operate on some data directly, you can provide a lambda function using .then() that will be run in order with the rest of your commands. Here's a basic example that should work in your scenario:
cy.get('.list-group-item').its('length').then(previousCount => {
// Add two elements and remove one...
cy.get('.list-group-item').its('.length').should('eq', previousCount + 1);
});
If you haven't already, I strongly suggest reading the fantastic introduction to Cypress in the docs. This page on variables and aliases should also be useful in this case.
Below is the error shown on failure of my test.
JMeter version: 3.2
Assertion error: false
Assertion failure: true
Assertion failure message: Value expected to be 'ptgrna9jgc1f3a77881+iamtestpass', but found 'ptgrna9jgc1f3a77881+iamtestpass'
There is a failure even if the 2 strings are exactly same. Any idea why this is happening?
PS: The tests are running as expected on a different machine.
Everything started working fine after switching to JMeter 3.1!
If assertion fails - something is wrong, my expectation is that the reason is in:
Your JSON Path Expression returns a JSON Array and you are expecting its 1st element
There is a leading or trailing space (or both) either in the JSON Path return value or in your expected data. Double check both using i.e. Debug Sampler and View Results Tree listener combination.
I'm learning nightwatch.js and am finding a lot of repeated code. For example,
// works
objects.expect.element('#user').to.be.present
objects.expect.element('#user').value.to.match(/\S/)
objects.expect.element('#user').value.to.not.equal(username)
Where objects.expect.element('#user') is obviously repeated. In this case, if I don't repeat that for each line, then I end up failing.
For example, if instead I use
// fails
objects.expect.element('#user').to.be.present
.value.to.match(/\S/)
.value.to.not.equal(username)
results in a fail message starting with, Expected element <#who> to be present not equal: "Ned the Nighthawk" not match: "/\S/" - expected "not present" but got: present
Is there a way to make this code more DRY?
Unfortunately nightwatch's expect namespace doesn't offer chaining.
In order to chain your assertions you need to use classic assert/verify library.
http://nightwatchjs.org/api#assertions
I'm building a Sequence job that contains a UserVariables activity (ParamLoading) and a Job activity (ExtractJob), in that order. ParamLoading creates 4 user variables and invokes a routine to fill each one with the correspondng value, then invokes ExtractJob pasiing it the parametes previously loaded.
ParamLoading invokes a server routine (GetParams) which simply executes a shell script (ShellQuery) and captures the result; that shell script executes an SQL query against an Oracle database and prints the result on screen.
As far as tests go, ShellQuery works as expected and GetParams returns the expected value. But when GetParams is invoked from the sequence job (no matter if it's in ParamLoading or ExtractJob) the job fails with the following error:
Test2..JobControl (#JOB033_TBK_026_EXT_PTLF): Controller problem: Error calling DSSetParam(RUTA_ORIGEN), code=-4
[ParamValue/Limitvalue is not appropriate]
I've checked data types, parameter names, all, without success or even a message saying what might be happening.
Code of ShellQuery:
value=$(sqlplus -s $1/$2#$3/$4 <<!
set heading off
set feedback off
set pages 0
select param_value from cfg_params where filter='$5' and param_name='$6';
!)
echo $value
Code of GetParams:
Call DSExecute("UNIX", Ruta_Programas:"getparams.sh ":Username:" ":Password:" ":Server:" ":ServiceId:" ":Filtro:" ":Parametro, Output, SystemReturnCode)
Ans = Output
Return(Ans)
What are you returning as values from GetParams?
Calling a function from a sequence expects an integer value back and any non-zero digit returned is evaluated as an error.
As a test, try changing the return value from the routines to values 0-4.
Solved. For those struggling with a similar problem, GetParams was returning the captured value from ShellQuery adding a special character called "field delimiter", and given that the character is a 254 in ASCII, any job receiving the parameter would complain of an invalid value, which was the error.
Changing the routine to the following solved it:
Call DSExecute("UNIX", Ruta_Programas:"getparams.sh ":Username:" ":Password:" ":Server:" ":ServiceId:" ":Filtro:" ":Parametro, Output, SystemReturnCode)
Ans = EReplace(Output, #FM, "")
Return(Ans)
Thanks to Matt Calderon for providing a clue for solving.
So I've created and published a Sinatra app to Heroku without any issues. I've even tested it locally with rackup to make sure it functions fine. There are a series of API calls to various places after a zip code is consumed from the URL, but Heroku just wants to tell me there is an server error.
I've added an error page that tries to give me more description, however, it tells me it can't perform a `count' for #, which I assume means hash. Here's the code that I think it's trying to execute...
if weather_doc.root.elements["weather"].children.count > 1
curr_temp = weather_doc.root.elements["weather/current_conditions/temp_f"].attributes["data"]
else
raise error(404, "Not A Valid Zip Code!")
end
If anyone wants to bang on it, it can be reached at, http://quiet-journey-14.heroku.com/ , but there's not much to be had.
Hash doesn't have a count method. It has a length method. If # really does refer to a hash object, then the problem is that you're calling a method that doesn't exist.
That # doesn't refer to Hash, it's the first character of #<Array:0x2b2080a3e028>. The part between the < and > is not shown in browsers (hiding the tags themselves), but visible with View Source.
Your real problem is not related to Ruby though, but to your navigation in the HTML or XML document (via DOM). Your statement
weather_doc.root.elements["weather"].children.count > 1
navigates the HTML/XML document, selecting the 'weather' elements, and (tries to) count the children. The result of the children call does not have a method count. Use length instead.
BTW, are you sure that the document contains a tag <weather>? Because that's what your're trying to select.
If you want to see what's behind #, try
raise probably_hash.class.to_s