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Matthew Adams By Matthew Adams Co-Founder

Since my last post, I've built a Visual Studio Extension provides basic support for discovering and running CucumberJS tests with Node.JS, in the Visual Studio Test Environment.

It borrows heavily from the Chutzpah test runner, but is nowhere near as complete!

Getting Started

  1. Install node.js and NPM
  2. Globally install cucumberjs using npm
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Install globally with

npm install -g cucumber

(Full instructions for installing Cucumber can be found here )

  1. Create a Visual Studio Project for your specs
  2. Add a Features folder in the project
  3. Add a file to contain your feature, with the extension .cucumber
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This is really important; in order to avoid collisions with SpecFlow, we have to use a different file extension

  1. Add your step definitions

Features

  • Automatic discovery of newly added tests
  • Automatic updating of modified tests
  • Test timings

Known Issues

It doesn't support traits.

Pretty printing isn't all that pretty.

It doesn't support debugging (anyone wants to help out with this, it'd be more than welcome).

Discovering the node package install location would be better done by executing the NPM config command rather than building the expected default install location.

Matthew Adams

Co-Founder

Matthew Adams

Matthew was CTO of a venture-backed technology start-up in the UK & US for 10 years, and is now the co-founder of endjin, which provides technology strategy, experience and development services to its customers who are seeking to take advantage of Microsoft Azure and the Cloud.