Hi, Here's the spec:
'absolute_time_in_words should say 'Today 08:00 PM'' FAILED expected: "Today 08:00 PM", got: "Today 08:00 pm" (using ==) absolute_time_in_words(Time.now.utc.change({ :hour => 20, :minute => 0, :second => 0 }), TZInfo::Timezone.get('Europe/Dublin')).should == "Today 08:00 PM" Here's the offending code: def absolute_time_in_words(local_time, timezone) today = timezone.utc_to_local(Time.now.utc).to_date local_date = local_time.to_date local_time.strftime( case when local_date == today; "Today %I:%M %p" when local_date == today + 1; "Tomorrow %I:%M %p" when local_date == today - 1; "Yesterday %I:%M %p" when local_date.year == today.year "%A, %d %b %I:%M %p" else "%A, %d %b %Y %I:%M %p" end ) end Thanks, Keith On Jan 24, 2008 5:40 AM, Keith McDonnell <keith at dancingtext.com> wrote: > Hi there, > > I have a *really* weird issue with rspec on rails: > > Given a time meridian formatted using %p > > When I run `rake spec` the time meridian is converted to lower case: > > expected: "Today 08:00 PM", > got: "Today 08:00 pm" > > Yet when I run `rake spec:models` and `spec -cfs app/models` the specs > pass, ie the the time meridian is in upper case. > > Anyone got any ideas how I can troubleshoot this one ? I'm using rails > 1.2.3, ruby 1.8.6, i686-darwin8.10.1, RSpec-1.0.6 (r2183) Can we see the code for the example and the method that is returning this value? > > Thanks in advance. > > Keith > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users