minitest version 5.25.0 has been released!
* home: <https://github.com/minitest/minitest>
* bugs: <https://github.com/minitest/minitest/issues>
* rdoc: <https://docs.seattlerb.org/minitest>
* clog: <https://github.com/minitest/minitest/blob/master/History.rdoc>
* vim: <https://github.com/sunaku/vim-ruby-minitest>
* emacs: <https://github.com/arthurnn/minitest-emacs>
minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting
TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking.
"I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were
allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were
paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test
frameworks...
I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable
compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and
thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity."
-- Wayne E. Seguin
minitest/test is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework.
It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and
readable.
minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto
minitest/test and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec
expectations.
minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your
algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb
co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential
one!
minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub)
object framework.
minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test
output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P
minitest/test is meant to have a clean implementation for language
implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working
test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case
discovery.
"Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing
framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!"
-- Piotr Szotkowski
Comparing to rspec:
rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby.
-- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest"
minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like:
classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to
learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like
extract-method refactorings still apply.
Changes:
### 5.25.0 / 2024-08-13
* 2 minor enhancements:
* Fixed some inefficiencies filtering and matching (mostly backtraces).
* Refactored siginfo handler to reduce runtime costs. Saved ~30%!
* 5 bug fixes:
* Added missing rdoc to get back to 100% coverage.
* Cleaning up ancient code checking for defined?(Encoding) and the like.
* Disambiguated some shadowed variables in minitest/compress.
* Fixed an ironic bug if using string-literals AND Werror.
* Improve description of test:slow task. (stomar)
This update release fixes some linking problems for shared libraries that surfaced with recent Mac OS updates.
## What's Changed
* fix shared library linking issues on Mac OS while at the same time gaining some speedup of wxRuby apps
* fix compatibility with the latest wxWidgets master updates
**Full Changelog**: https://github.com/mcorino/wxRuby3/compare/v1.0.1...v1.1.1
This release targets the wxWidgets 3.2.5 version.
For more details see the original release announcement here: https://github.com/mcorino/wxRuby3/discussions/293
Glimmer DSL for Web 0.5.0 has been released with support for Component
Slots (by adding `slot: :slot_name` to any parent element, like a `div`,
inside a `Glimmer::Web::Component` `markup {...}` element, and later having
a consumer open a `slot_name {...}` block inside the content block of a
consumed component).
GitHub : https://github.com/AndyObtiva/glimmer-dsl-web
RubyGem : https://rubygems.org/gems/glimmer-dsl-web
# Change Log
## 0.5.0
- Support Glimmer Web Component Slots (by adding `slot: :slot_name` to any
parent element, like a `div`, inside a `Glimmer::Web::Component` `markup
{...}` element, and later having a consumer open a `slot_name {...}` block
inside the content block of a consumed component)
Glimmer DSL for Web (Ruby-in-the-Browser Web Frontend Framework) version
0.4.4 has been released.
GitHub : https://github.com/AndyObtiva/glimmer-dsl-web
RubyGem : https://rubygems.org/gems/glimmer-dsl-web
Change Log (0.4.4):
- Support setting element `style` property as String or Hash (like
`background-color: yello; font-size: 12px;` or `{background_color: :yellow,
font_size: 12}`)
- Support setting element `classes` property as String or Array of
Strings/Symbols (like `"pushed round"`, `['pushed', 'round']` or `[:pushed,
:round]`)
- Upgrade opal-jquery to version 0.5.2