This is a script that takes takes Gherkin feature files enriched with Definition
blocks and outputs orindary Gherkin feature files that can be read by Cucumber.
As an example, take this input file:
Feature: I want to test my bicycle
Scenario: Count wheels
Given I have a bicycle with 2 wheels
When I count the wheels
Then I get 2
Definition: I have a bicycle with <numberOfWheels> wheels
Given I have a frame
And I attach <numberOfWheels> wheels
And I attach a saddle
Gherkin-definitions turns this into the following output:
Feature: I want to test my bicycle
Scenario: Count wheels
Given I have a frame
And I attach 2 wheels
And I attach a saddle
When I count the wheels
Then I get 2
Because definition steps get expanded in the features that are run, the test output will contain all these steps. We can mitigate this in the future by writing a custom formatter that cleans up the output.
gherkin-definitions
exports a function that transforms a file with definitions to one where definition steps have been expanded:
var input = fs.readFileSync('/path/to/my/file', { encoding: 'utf8' });
var output = require('gherkin-definitions')(input);
fs.writeFileSync('/path/to/output', output);
Included is also a gulp task, which can be used like this:
var gherkinDefinitions = require('gherkin-definitions/gulp');
gulp.task('expand-gherkin-definitions', function() {
gulp.src('./features/**/*.feature')
.pipe(gherkinDefinitions)
.pipe(gulp.dest('./expanded-features'));
});
Now you can run your tests against the expanded-features
directory instead of the features
one.
We want a way to compose steps out of other steps for use in cucumber.js. This seemed the easiest solution to get the job done.
Although some in the cucumber community consider putting to much (or any) logic into steps something of an antipattern, for us it makes sense. We primarily use (abuse?) Gherkin as a basic programming language (see Minosse) allowing our testers to work independently on automated testcases. The recommended approach of tackling reduction in the step implementations is at odds with this, because it requires diving into another language (the one the steps are written in). Hence the need for a way to write gherkin 'functions', to keep our feature files clean and readable.