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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Best way to remove sections of text from a file Post 302238949 by joeyg on Monday 22nd of September 2008 11:52:12 AM
Old 09-22-2008
Tools I think you are perhaps still good with two account #'s

The egrep will still 'pass' since an account-to-keep will match.
Test and update on status.
 

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Test::BDD::Cucumber::Manual::Steps(3pm) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   Test::BDD::Cucumber::Manual::Steps(3pm)

NAME
Test::BDD::Cucumber::Manual::Steps - How to write Step Definitions VERSION
version 0.11 INTRODUCTION
The 'code' part of a Cucumber test-suite are the Step Definition files which match steps, and execute code based on them. This document aims to give you a quick overview of those. STARTING OFF
Most of your step files will want to start something like: #!perl use strict; use warnings; use Test::More; use Test::BDD::Cucumber::StepFile; use Method::Signatures; The fake shebang line gives some hints to syntax highlighters, and "use strict;" and "use warnings;" are hopefully fairly standard at this point. Most of my Step Definition files make use of Test::More, but you can use any Test::Builder based testing module. Your step will pass its pass or fail status back to its harness via Test::Builder - each step is run as if it were its own tiny test file, with its own localized Test::Builder object. Test::BDD::Cucumber::StepFile gives us the functions "Given()", "When()", "Then()" and "Step()". These pass the step definitions to the class loading the step definitions, and specify which Step Verb should be used - "Step()" matches any. Method::Signatures allows us to use a small amount of syntactic sugar for the step definitions, and gives us the "func()" keyword you'll see in a minute. STEP DEFINITIONS
Given qr/I have (d+)/, func ($c) { $c->stash->{'scenario'}->{'count'} += $1; } When "The count is an integer", func ($c) { $c->stash->{'scenario'}->{'count'} = int( $c->stash->{'scenario'}->{'count'} ); } Then qr/The count should be (d+)/, func ($c) { is( $c->stash->{'scenario'}->{'count'}, $c->matches->[0], "Count matches" ); } Each of the exported verb functions accept a regular expression (or a string that's used as one), and a coderef. The coderef is passed a single argument, the Test::BDD::Cucumber::StepContext object. To make this a little prettier, we use Method::Signatures's "func()" keyword so we're not continually typing: "sub { my $c = shift; ... ". We will evaluate the regex immediately before we execute the coderef, so you can use $1, $2, $etc, although these are also available via the StepContext. NEXT STEPS
How step files are loaded is discussed in Test::BDD::Cucumber::Manual::Architecture, but isn't of much interest. Of far more interest should be seeing what you have available in Test::BDD::Cucumber::StepContext... AUTHOR
Peter Sergeant "pete@clueball.com" LICENSE
Copyright 2011, Peter Sergeant; Licensed under the same terms as Perl perl v5.14.2 2012-05-20 Test::BDD::Cucumber::Manual::Steps(3pm)
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