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02 Predefined steps

Matthew Flint edited this page Jul 29, 2014 · 10 revisions

Predefined steps give you a fast and easy way to start testing your app without having to do any programming. But please remember that Calabash is not limited to the steps defined in this document. You can write your own, so called, "custom steps". Using custom steps, Calabash iOS is able to synthesize most touch events and find most views. Ideally, the features that describe your app are written with custom steps that use language of your business domain.

Please note that pre-defined steps is intended for people to get started quickly, and is not considered best practice. For best practices we recommend people to architect their test suite based on this article.

This document gives examples, not the full step definitions. It is a "human readable" description of the step definitions found in the file calabash_steps.rb (calabash-cucumber/features/step_definitions/calabash_steps.rb).

You can easily generalize the examples. For example, Then I touch the "login" button can have any string in quotes, not just "login".

Also note that most steps find views by their accessibility labels or ids. This means that for the tests to work, you must enable accessibility on the simulator or phone you are testing on.

If you have any questions, please use the google group

http://groups.google.com/group/calabash-ios

Screenshots

You can take a screenshot

Then take picture

This will generate a .png prefixed with the step number.

Touching (tapping)

Touching arbitrary views by accessibility label:

Then I touch "accLabel"

Buttons (UIButtons) by accessibility label

Then I touch the "login" button

or by number/index (note number starts with 1 not 0)

Then I touch button number 1

Input fields (UITextFields). Note, this looks for an UITextField with the placeholder property set to the quoted string.

Then I touch the "placeholder" input field

List items (UITableViewCells) by number. Note this can only be used to touch visible cells - it doesn't try to scroll down/up.

Then I touch list item number 1

Switches (UISwitch),

Then I toggle the switch

this step works if there is a single switch. Otherwise use,

Then I toggle the "accLabel" switch

where "accLabel" should be the accessibilityLabel for the switch.

Built-in keyboard. Touching the Done/Search button

Then I touch done
Then I touch search

Map views.

Then I touch the user location

Coordinate based touches,

Then I touch on screen 100 from the left and 250 from the top

Entering text

Here are the steps that work on text fields (UITextField). Text is entered by first touching the text field to make it gain focus, and then the text is typed into the field with the native keyboard.

These steps identify text fields through accessibility labels (through the use of the filter marked:*), despite some predefined steps in the Waiting section using placeholders instead. This is just a small inconsistency in the Calabash that hopefully will be resolved, such that steps for entering text will also identify text fields by placeholder as well.

Entering text by accessibility label:

Then I enter "text to write" into the "accessibility label" input field

alias

Then I fill in "accessibility label" with "text to write"

(also an alias; kept for legacy reasons, but can identify text fields by placeholder) Entering text with the native keyboard:

Then I use the native keyboard to enter "text to write" into the "placeholder or accessibility label" input field

Text by table (fields are by "placeholder")

I fill in text fields as follows:
 | field      | text    |
 | Last Name  | Krukow  |
 | Email      | a@b.c   |
 | Username   | krukow  |
 | Password   | 123     |
 | Confirm    | 123     |

Text by input field number:

Then I enter "text" into input field number 1

Clearing fields (like entering "")

Then I clear "accessibility label"

Clearing fields by number

Then I clear input field number 1

Waiting

These are usually about waiting to see certain text or ui components. Usually these are identified by their accessibilityLabels, component type (like a navigation bar) or pure text like in a label or a web view.

Waiting for text, or a view with a certain accessibilityLabel

Then I wait to see "text or label"
Then I wait for "text or label" to appear

wait for something to disappear

Then I wait until I don't see "text or label"
I wait to not see "text or label"

waiting for a button with an accessibilityLabel

Then I wait for the "login" button to appear

waiting for an iOS navigation bar with a certain title,

Then I wait to see a navigation bar titled "title"

waiting for a text field

Then I wait for the "label" input field

waiting for a number of text fields

Then I wait for 2 input fields

waiting in general

Then I wait
Then I wait and wait
Then I wait and wait and wait...
Then I wait for 2.3 seconds

(this 2,4, 10 or an arbitrary number of seconds).

Back button

In an iOS navigation bar, you can touch the "back" button using

Then I go back

Swipes

Swiping an unspecified place (usually when you have big scroll view in the center of the screen). Swipe directions can be left, right, up and down.

Then I swipe left

Swiping a scroll view by index/number (and offset), or accessibilityLabel

Then I swipe left on number 2
Then I swipe left on number 2 at x 20 and y 10
Then I swipe left on "accLabel"

Swiping table cells, by number

Then I swipe on cell number 2

Pinch (for zooms)

This step makes a small pinch to zoom in or out. Either at the first scroll view of the screen, or a the center of a view with a certain accessibility label.

Then I pinch to zoom in
Then I pinch to zoom in on "accLabel"

Scrolling

Scrolling on scroll views. Direction can be left, right, up or down.

Then I scroll down
Then I scroll down on "accLabel"

Playback of touch events

If you have recorded a touch event sequence as "mytouch" you can playback those using

Then I playback recording "mytouch"
Then I playback recording "mytouch on "accLabel"
Then I playback recording "mytouch on "accLabel" with offset 10,22

Device orientation

You can rotate the device or simulator left or right.

Then I rotate device left

(when using the LessPainful which runs physical devices, this step is implemented by performing an actual physical rotation of the device using our little robots :)

Assertions

Like waiting, these are usually about seeing certain text or ui components. Usually these are identified by their accessibilityLabels, component type (like a navigation bar) or pure text like in a label or a web view.

If the thing being asserted doesn't exist in the view, the test will fail.

Asserting existence of text, or a view with a certain accessibilityLabel

Then I should see "text or label"
Then I should not see "text or label"
Then I see the text "some text"
Then I don't see the text "text or label"
Then I don't see the "someview"
Then I see the "someview"

Asserting existence of buttons:

Then I should see a "login" button
Then I should not see a "login" button

More on text, prefix, suffix, and sub string.

Then I should see text starting with "prefix"
Then I should see text containing "sub text"
Then I should see text ending with "suffix"

Seeing some text fields

Then I see 2 input fields
Then I should see a "Username" input field
Then I should not see a "Username" input field

Seeing maps and user location

Then I should see a map
Then I should see the user location

Next Steps

The next level of using Calabash and Cucumber is to write your own steps:

03-Writing-custom-steps

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