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change matcher

The change matcher is used to specify that a block of code changes some mutable state. You can specify what will change using either of two forms:

  • expect { do_something }.to change(object, :attribute)
  • expect { do_something }.to change { object.attribute }

You can further qualify the change by chaining from and/or to or one of by, by_at_most, by_at_least.

Background

Given a file named "lib/counter.rb" with:

class Counter
class << self
def increment
@count ||= 0
@count += 1
end

def count
@count ||= 0
end
end
end

Expect change

Given a file named "spec/example_spec.rb" with:

require "counter"

RSpec.describe Counter, "#increment" do
it "should increment the count" do
expect { Counter.increment }.to change { Counter.count }.from(0).to(1)
end

# deliberate failure
it "should increment the count by 2" do
expect { Counter.increment }.to change { Counter.count }.by(2)
end
end

When I run rspec spec/example_spec.rb

Then the output should contain "1 failure"

Then the output should contain "expected Counter.count to have changed by 2, but was changed by 1".

Expect no change

Given a file named "spec/example_spec.rb" with:

require "counter"

RSpec.describe Counter, "#increment" do
it "should not increment the count by 1 (using not_to)" do
expect { Counter.increment }.not_to change { Counter.count }
end

it "should not increment the count by 1 (using to_not)" do
expect { Counter.increment }.to_not change { Counter.count }
end
end

When I run rspec spec/example_spec.rb

Then the output should contain "2 failures"

Then the output should contain "expected Counter.count not to have changed, but did change from 1 to 2".