Gherkin uses a set of special keywords to give structure and meaning to executable specifications. Each keyword is translated to many spoken languages; in this reference we’ll use English.
Most lines in a Gherkin document start with one of the keywords.
Comment lines are allowed anywhere in the file. They begin with zero or more spaces, followed by a hash sign (#
) and some text. Comments do have to start on a new line.
Either spaces or tabs may be used for indentation. The recommended indentation level is two spaces. Here is an example:
Feature: Guess the word
# The first example has two steps
Scenario: Maker starts a game
When the Maker starts a game
Then the Maker waits for a Breaker to join
# The second example has three steps
Scenario: Breaker joins a game
Given the Maker has started a game with the word "silky"
When the Breaker joins the Maker's game
Then the Breaker must guess a word with 5 characters
The trailing portion (after the keyword) of each step is matched to a code block, called a step definition.
Keywords 🔗︎
Each line that isn’t a blank line has to start with a Gherkin keyword, followed by any text you like. The only exceptions are the feature and scenario descriptions.
The primary keywords are:
Feature
-
Rule
(as of Gherkin 6) -
Example
(orScenario
) -
Given
,When
,Then
,And
,But
(steps) Background
-
Scenario Outline
(orScenario Template
) Examples
There are a few secondary keywords as well:
-
"""
(Doc Strings) -
|
(Data Tables) -
@
(Tags) -
#
(Comments)
Localisation
Gherkin is localised for many spoken languages; each has their own localised equivalent of these keywords.
Feature 🔗︎
The purpose of the Feature
keyword is to provide a high-level description of a software feature, and to group related scenarios.
The first primary keyword in a Gherkin document must always be Feature
, followed by a :
and a short text that describes the feature.
You can add free-form text underneath Feature
to add more description.
These description lines are ignored by Cucumber at runtime, but are available for reporting (They are included by default in html reports).
Feature: Guess the word
The word guess game is a turn-based game for two players.
The Maker makes a word for the Breaker to guess. The game
is over when the Breaker guesses the Maker's word.
Example: Maker starts a game
The name and the optional description have no special meaning to Cucumber. Their purpose is to provide a place for you to document important aspects of the feature, such as a brief explanation and a list of business rules (general acceptance criteria).
The free format description for Feature
ends when you start a line with the keyword Rule
, Example
or Scenario Outline
(or their alias keywords).
You can place tags above Feature
to group related features, independent of your file and directory structure.
Descriptions 🔗︎
Free-form descriptions (as described above for Feature
) can also be placed underneath Example
/Scenario
, Background
, Scenario Outline
and Rule
.
You can write anything you like, as long as no line starts with a keyword.
Rule 🔗︎
The (optional) Rule
keyword has been added in Gherkin v6. (Note that Gherkin 6 has not yet been incorporated into all implementation of Cucumber!) The purpose of the Rule
keyword is to represent one business rule that should be implemented. It provides additional information for a feature. A Rule
is used to group together several scenarios that belong to this business rule. A Rule
should contain one or more scenarios that illustrate the particular rule. A Rule
cannot contain a Background
.
For example:
# -- FILE: features/gherkin.rule_example.feature
Feature: Highlander
Rule: There can be only One
Example: Only One -- More than one alive
Given there are 3 ninjas
And there are more than one ninja alive
When 2 ninjas meet, they will fight
Then one ninja dies (but not me)
And there is one ninja less alive
Example: Only One -- One alive
Given there is only 1 ninja alive
Then he (or she) will live forever ;-)
Rule: There can be Two (in some cases)
Example: Two -- Dead and Reborn as Phoenix
...
Example 🔗︎
This is a concrete example that illustrates a business rule. It consists of a list of steps.
The keyword Scenario
is a synonym of the keyword Example
.
You can have as many steps as you like, but we recommend you keep the number at 3-5 per example. If they become longer than that, they lose their expressive power as specification and documentation.
In addition to being a specification and documentation, an example is also a test. As a whole, your examples are an executable specification of the system.
Examples follow this same pattern:
- Describe an initial context (
Given
steps) - Describe an event (
When
steps) - Describe an expected outcome (
Then
steps)
Steps 🔗︎
Each step starts with Given
, When
, Then
, And
, or But
.
Cucumber executes each step in a scenario one at a time, in the sequence you’ve written them in. When Cucumber tries to execute a step, it looks for a matching step definition to execute.
Keywords are not taken into account when looking for a step definition. This means you cannot have a Given
, When
, Then
, And
or But
step with the same text as another step.
Cucumber considers the following steps duplicates:
Given there is money in my account
Then there is money in my account
This might seem like a limitation, but it forces you to come up with a less ambiguous, more clear domain language:
Given my account has a balance of £430
Then my account should have a balance of £430
Given 🔗︎
Given
steps are used to describe the initial context of the system – the scene of the scenario. It is typically something that happened in the past.
When Cucumber executes a Given
step, it will configure the system to be in a well-defined state, such as creating and configuring objects or adding data to a test database.
The purpose of Given
steps is to put the system in a known state before the user (or external system) starts interacting with the system (in the When
steps). Avoid talking about user interaction in Given
’s. If you were creating use cases, Given
’s would be your preconditions.
It’s okay to have several Given
steps (just use And
or But
for number 2 and upwards to make it more readable).
Examples:
- Mickey and Minnie have started a game
- I am logged in
- Joe has a balance of £42
When 🔗︎
When
steps are used to describe an event, or an action. This can be a person interacting with the system, or it can be an event triggered by another system.
It’s strongly recommended you only have a single When
step per Scenario. If you feel compelled to add more, it’s usually a sign that you should split the scenario up into multiple scenarios.
Examples:
- Guess a word
- Invite a friend
- Withdraw money
Imagine it’s 1922
Most software does something people could do manually (just not as efficiently).
Try hard to come up with examples that don’t make any assumptions about technology or user interface. Imagine it’s 1922, when there were no computers.
Implementation details should be hidden in the step definitions.
Then 🔗︎
Then
steps are used to describe an expected outcome, or result.
The step definition of a Then
step should use an assertion to compare the actual outcome (what the system actually does) to the expected outcome (what the step says the system is supposed to do).
An observation should be on an observable output. That is, something that comes out of the system (report, user interface, message), and not something deeply buried inside it (like a database).
Examples:
- See that the guessed word was wrong
- Receive an invitation
- Card should be swallowed
While it might be tempting to implement Then
steps to just look in the database – resist that temptation!
You should only verify outcome that is observable for the user (or external system), and databases usually are not.
And, But 🔗︎
If you have several Given
’s, When
’s, or Then
s, you could write:
Example: Multiple Givens
Given one thing
Given another thing
Given yet another thing
When I open my eyes
Then I should see something
Then I shouldn't see something else
Or, you could make it read more fluidly by writing:
Example: Multiple Givens
Given one thing
And another thing
And yet another thing
When I open my eyes
Then I should see something
But I shouldn't see something else
Background 🔗︎
Occasionally you’ll find yourself repeating the same Given
steps in all of the scenarios in a feature.
Since it is repeated in every scenario, this is an indication that those steps are not essential to describe the scenarios; they are incidental details. You can literally move such Given
steps to the background, by grouping them under a Background
section.
A Background
allows you to add some context to the scenarios in the feature. It can contain one or more Given
steps.
A Background
is run before each scenario, but after any Before hooks. In your feature file, put the Background
before the first Scenario
.
You can only have one set of Background
steps per feature. If you need different Background
steps for different scenarios, you’ll need to split them into different feature files.
For example:
Feature: Multiple site support
Only blog owners can post to a blog, except administrators,
who can post to all blogs.
Background:
Given a global administrator named "Greg"
And a blog named "Greg's anti-tax rants"
And a customer named "Dr. Bill"
And a blog named "Expensive Therapy" owned by "Dr. Bill"
Scenario: Dr. Bill posts to his own blog
Given I am logged in as Dr. Bill
When I try to post to "Expensive Therapy"
Then I should see "Your article was published."
Scenario: Dr. Bill tries to post to somebody else's blog, and fails
Given I am logged in as Dr. Bill
When I try to post to "Greg's anti-tax rants"
Then I should see "Hey! That's not your blog!"
Scenario: Greg posts to a client's blog
Given I am logged in as Greg
When I try to post to "Expensive Therapy"
Then I should see "Your article was published."
For a less explicit alternative to Background
, check out tagged hooks.
Tips for using Background 🔗︎
- Don’t use
Background
to set up complicated states, unless that state is actually something the client needs to know.- For example, if the user and site names don’t matter to the client, use a higher-level step such as
Given I am logged in as a site owner
.
- For example, if the user and site names don’t matter to the client, use a higher-level step such as
- Keep your
Background
section short.- The client needs to actually remember this stuff when reading the scenarios. If the
Background
is more than 4 lines long, consider moving some of the irrelevant details into higher-level steps.
- The client needs to actually remember this stuff when reading the scenarios. If the
- Make your
Background
section vivid.- Use colourful names, and try to tell a story. The human brain keeps track of stories much better than it keeps track of names like
"User A"
,"User B"
,"Site 1"
, and so on.
- Use colourful names, and try to tell a story. The human brain keeps track of stories much better than it keeps track of names like
- Keep your scenarios short, and don’t have too many.
- If the
Background
section has scrolled off the screen, the reader no longer has a full overview of whats happening. Think about using higher-level steps, or splitting the*.feature
file.
- If the
Scenario Outline 🔗︎
The Scenario Outline
keyword can be used to run the same Scenario
multiple times, with different combinations of values.
The keyword Scenario Template
is a synonym of the keyword Scenario Outline
.
Copying and pasting scenarios to use different values quickly becomes tedious and repetitive:
Scenario: eat 5 out of 12
Given there are 12 cucumbers
When I eat 5 cucumbers
Then I should have 7 cucumbers
Scenario: eat 5 out of 20
Given there are 20 cucumbers
When I eat 5 cucumbers
Then I should have 15 cucumbers
We can collapse these two similar scenarios into a Scenario Outline
.
Scenario outlines allow us to more concisely express these scenarios through the use of a template with < >
-delimited parameters:
Scenario Outline: eating
Given there are <start> cucumbers
When I eat <eat> cucumbers
Then I should have <left> cucumbers
Examples:
| start | eat | left |
| 12 | 5 | 7 |
| 20 | 5 | 15 |
A Scenario Outline
must contain an Examples
(or Scenarios
) section. Its steps are interpreted as a template which is never directly run. Instead, the Scenario Outline
is run once for each row in the Examples
section beneath it (not counting the first header row).
The steps can use <>
delimited parameters that reference headers in the examples table. Cucumber will replace these parameters with values from the table before it tries to match the step against a step definition.
You can also use parameters in multiline step arguments.
Step Arguments 🔗︎
In some cases you might want to pass more data to a step than fits on a single line. For this purpose Gherkin has Doc Strings
and Data Tables
.
Doc Strings 🔗︎
Doc Strings
are handy for passing a larger piece of text to a step definition.
The text should be offset by delimiters consisting of three double-quote marks on lines of their own:
Given a blog post named "Random" with Markdown body
"""
Some Title, Eh?
===============
Here is the first paragraph of my blog post. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,
consectetur adipiscing elit.
"""
In your step definition, there’s no need to find this text and match it in your pattern. It will automatically be passed as the last argument in the step definition.
Indentation of the opening """
is unimportant, although common practice is two spaces in from the enclosing step. The indentation inside the triple quotes, however, is significant. Each line of the Doc String will be dedented according to the opening """
. Indentation beyond the column of the opening “”” will therefore be preserved.
Data Tables 🔗︎
Data Tables
are handy for passing a list of values to a step definition:
Given the following users exist:
| name | email | twitter |
| Aslak | [email protected] | @aslak_hellesoy |
| Julien | [email protected] | @jbpros |
| Matt | [email protected] | @mattwynne |
Just like Doc Strings
, Data Tables
will be passed to the step definition as the last argument.
Cucumber provides a rich API for manipulating tables from within step definitions. See the Data Table API referencereference for more details.
Spoken Languages 🔗︎
The language you choose for Gherkin should be the same language your users and domain experts use when they talk about the domain. Translating between two languages should be avoided.
This is why Gherkin has been translated to over 70 languages.
Here is a Gherkin scenario written in Norwegian:
# language: no
Funksjonalitet: Gjett et ord
Eksempel: Ordmaker starter et spill
Når Ordmaker starter et spill
Så må Ordmaker vente på at Gjetter blir med
Eksempel: Gjetter blir med
Gitt at Ordmaker har startet et spill med ordet "bløtt"
Når Gjetter blir med på Ordmakers spill
Så må Gjetter gjette et ord på 5 bokstaver
A # language:
header on the first line of a feature file tells Cucumber what spoken language to use – for example # language: fr
for French. If you omit this header, Cucumber will default to English (en
).
Some Cucumber implementations also let you set the default language in the configuration, so you don’t need to place the # language
header in every file.
Gherkin Dialects 🔗︎
In order to allow Gherkin to be written in a number of languages, the keywords have been translated into multiple languages. To improve readability and flow, some languages may have more than one translation for any given keyword.
List translation options 🔗︎
You can get information about the translations from the command line.
To see a listing of available languages:
cucumber --i18n help
To list the keywords of a particular language, use the language code:
cucumber --i18n <language_code>
For example, to see the keywords in French:
cucumber --i18n fr
Overview 🔗︎
You can find all translation of Gherkin on GitHub. This is also the place to add or update translations.