bdd_framework 1.1.0 copy "bdd_framework: ^1.1.0" to clipboard
bdd_framework: ^1.1.0 copied to clipboard

BDD framework for Dart/Flutter. Lets you create BDD tests in code, and gives you easy to read error messages when assertions fail. Exports to Gherkin/Cucumber feature files.

BDD Framework #

This package is brought to you by Zaher Hammoud, and myself, Marcelo Glasberg.

This is a BDD framework for Dart/Flutter:

  • It lets you create BDD tests in code.
  • It gives you easy to read error messages when assertions fail.
  • It does not need generated code to work.
  • No "glue files" are needed.
  • It's "developer-centric", meaning it caters to the needs of software developers first, not product managers.
  • Easy to use both for standalone developers and for teams.
  • Will help you write a lot more BDDs, since it makes them so easy.
  • Exports to Gherkin/Cucumber .feature files (optional).

See https://docs.cucumber.io/gherkin/ for information on the Gherkin syntax.

2. How #

Other BDD packages work like this:

  • Product managers write BDDs into well-formed feature files.
  • Developers create "glue files" for those feature files.
  • Developers implement the BDDs.
  • If developers find problems and missing information in the feature files, they need to let the managers know, wait for the files to be fixed, and then redo the glue files and implement the fixes in code.
  • If developers notice missing BDDs, they also must ask the manager to create new feature files.

The above process is usually painful for developers, resulting in less BDDs being written.

This BDD Framework's process is very different and much easier:

  • Product managers write BDD drafts. Doesn't need to be well-formed feature files.
  • Developers implement the BDDs in code.
  • If developers find problems and missing information in the feature files, they can just fix them right away, in code.
  • If developers notice missing BDDs, they can just add them right away, in code.
  • Developers run the BDD tests and get the results. They can see both the BDD text and the results very well formatted in the console.
  • Running the BDD tests also creates the feature files automatically.
  • The feature files will then naturally get committed to the version control repo. The product manager can then review them to see if they are correct. This also maintains an historical record of feature file changes in the repo. They can even be diffed to make it clear what changed from version to version.

I believe this package's process is also easier on the product managers, since they don't need to write well-formed BDDs from the start. And they can trust the developers to add detail when they are implementing the code, which is when the details become obvious.

3. Creating your BDD tests #

You create your BDD tests in code, not in .feature files. For example:

import 'package:bdd_framework/bdd_framework.dart';
import "package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart";

void main() {

    var feature = BddFeature('Buying amount');
    
    Bdd(feature)
       .scenario('Buying amount for stock orders, with zero fees.')
       //
       .given('The user has 120 dollars.')
       .and('IBM bid-price is 3 dollars, ask-price is 10.')
       .and('Fees are zero.')
       //
       .when('The user opens the order.')
       //
       .then('The buying amount is 12 shares.')
       .and('It costs 120 dollars.')
       //      
       .run((ctx) async {
           
           // Given:
           setCashBalance(120);         
           setQuote(IBM, bid: 3, ask: 10);
           setFees(0);         
        
           // When:
           var buyingAmount = openOrder(IBM);
             
           // Then:
           expect(buyingAmount.shares, 12);         
           expect(buyingAmount.dollars, 120);
       });
       
    Bdd(feature)
       .scenario('Another scenario here.')
       ...   
}       

The above code would automatically generate a feature file like this:

Feature: Buying amount

  Scenario: Buying amount for stock orders, with zero fees.
    Given the user has 120 dollars.
    And IBM bid-price is 3 dollars, ask-price is 10.
    And fees are zero.
    When the user opens the order.
    Then the buying amount is 12 shares.
    And it costs 120 dollars.
    
  Scenario: Another scenario here.
    ...  

4. Running all BDDs at once #

Create a file called run_all.dart and list all your bdd files. Here, for example, we list 3 BDD files: bdd_search_test.dart, bdd_activity_test.dart and bdd_notifications_test.dart

import 'package:bdd_framework/bdd_framework.dart';
import 'package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart';

import '../bdd_search_test.dart' as bdd_search_test;
import '../bdd_activity_test.dart' as bdd_activity_test;
import '../bdd_notifications_test.dart' as bdd_search_test;

void main() async {
  
  /// This will print the result to the console. 
  BddReporter.set(
     ConsoleReporter(),
     FeatureFileReporter(clearAllOutputBeforeRun: true),
  );    

  group('bdd_search_test.dart', bdd_search_test.main);
  group('bdd_activity_test.dart', bdd_activity_test.main);  
  group('bdd_notifications_test', bdd_notifications_test.main);  

  await BddReporter.reportAll();
}

The BddReporter.set() method lets you add one or more "reporters" to decide where you want to see the test results. You can create any reporters want by extending the BddReporter class. For example, you could create an HtmlReporter() to output your tests as HTML and then add them to your internal company's website.

The BDD Framework package comes out of the box with 2 reporters:

  • ConsoleReporter() prints the results to the console. Under IntelliJ for Windows the output will have color. Note: Colors don't work under IntelliJ for Mac.

  • FeatureFileReporter() writes the results into .feature files that contain your BDDs in Gherkin language.
    • If parameter clearAllOutputBeforeRun is true, all previous feature files will be deleted and recreated time you run the tests.
    • You can set the variable FeatureFileReporter.dir to choose the directory where your feature files will be created. The default is to save them into ./gen_features/. If you save them into your Flutter project, you can then simply commit your code to add those files to your version control repo. This will serve as documentation for your current project version.
    • If you use Jira, you can install Cucumber for Jira to show your BDDs inside of Jira. Each time you run the tests, create the feature files, and commit them to your repo, Cucumber for Jira will read those files and present them well formatted for you.

Copyright #

This package is copyrighted and brought to you by Parkside Technologies, a company which is simplifying global access to US stocks.

This package is published here with permission.

Please, see the license page for more information.


The Flutter packages I've authored:

My Medium Articles:

My article in the official Flutter documentation:


Marcelo Glasberg:

github.com/marcglasberg
linkedin.com/in/marcglasberg/
twitter.com/glasbergmarcelo
stackoverflow.com/users/3411681/marcg
medium.com/@marcglasberg

22
likes
130
pub points
56%
popularity

Publisher

verified publisherglasberg.dev

BDD framework for Dart/Flutter. Lets you create BDD tests in code, and gives you easy to read error messages when assertions fail. Exports to Gherkin/Cucumber feature files.

Repository (GitHub)
View/report issues

Documentation

API reference

License

BSD-3-Clause (license)

Dependencies

characters, collection, flutter, flutter_test, meta

More

Packages that depend on bdd_framework