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-rw-r--r--guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md5
-rw-r--r--guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md3
-rw-r--r--guides/source/action_view_overview.md45
-rw-r--r--guides/source/active_record_querying.md4
-rw-r--r--guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md3
-rw-r--r--guides/source/caching_with_rails.md22
-rw-r--r--guides/source/configuring.md4
-rw-r--r--guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md33
-rw-r--r--guides/source/getting_started.md7
-rw-r--r--guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/testing.md46
11 files changed, 113 insertions, 65 deletions
diff --git a/guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md b/guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md
index d5b3766a5b..684bd286bc 100644
--- a/guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md
+++ b/guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md
@@ -214,8 +214,9 @@ end
Due to a [change in Rack](https://github.com/rack/rack/commit/28b014484a8ac0bbb388e7eaeeef159598ec64fc),
`rails server` now listens on `localhost` instead of `0.0.0.0` by default. This
-should have minimal impact on the standard development workflow as http://localhost:3000
-will continue to work as before on your own machine.
+should have minimal impact on the standard development workflow as both
+http://127.0.0.1:3000 and http://localhost:3000 will continue to work as before
+on your own machine.
However, with this change you will no longer be able to access the Rails
server from a different machine, for example if your development environment
diff --git a/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md b/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md
index 73b240ff2c..089ce53f07 100644
--- a/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md
+++ b/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md
@@ -530,6 +530,9 @@ url helper.
<%= user_url(@user, host: 'example.com') %>
```
+NOTE: non-`GET` links require [jQuery UJS](https://github.com/rails/jquery-ujs)
+and won't work in mailer templates. They will result in normal `GET` requests.
+
### Sending Multipart Emails
Action Mailer will automatically send multipart emails if you have different
diff --git a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
index 44c02165db..3541bbaa93 100644
--- a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
+++ b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
@@ -356,39 +356,34 @@ Supposing we use the same `_box` partial from above, this would produce the same
View Paths
----------
-When rendering the view for a request, the controller needs to resolve where to find each of the directories are located.
+When rendering a response, the controller needs to resolve where the different
+views are located. By default it only looks inside the `app/views` directory.
-We are able to modify the order these locations are resolved by using `prepend_view_path` and `append_view_path`.
-
-This allows us to add new paths to the beginning or end of the list used to resolve these paths.
+We can add other locations and give them a certain precedence when resolving
+paths using the `prepend_view_path` and `append_view_path` methods.
### Prepend view path
-This can be helpful for example, when we want to prepend a different directory for subdomains.
+This can be helpful for example, when we want to put views inside a different
+directory for subdomains.
We can do this by using:
-```prepend_view_path "app/views/#{request.subdomain}"```
-
-Then our list becomes something like:
-
-```
-[
- ~/rails_app/app/views/<subdomain>,
- ~/rails_app/app/views,
- # ...
-]
+```ruby
+prepend_view_path "app/views/#{request.subdomain}"
```
-This will put the subdomain path at the beginning of the list.
+Then Action View will look first in this directory when resolving views.
### Append view path
Similarly, we can append paths:
-```append_view_path "app/views/direct"```.
+```ruby
+append_view_path "app/views/direct"
+```
-This will add ```app/views/direct``` and the end of lookup paths for views.
+This will add `app/views/direct` to the end of the lookup paths.
Overview of helpers provided by Action View
-------------------------------------------
@@ -498,7 +493,7 @@ Returns a stylesheet link tag for the sources specified as arguments. If you don
stylesheet_link_tag "application" # => <link href="/assets/application.css" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" />
```
-You can also include all styles in the stylesheet directory using :all as the source:
+You can also include all styles in the stylesheet directory using `:all` as the source:
```ruby
stylesheet_link_tag :all
@@ -513,7 +508,7 @@ stylesheet_link_tag :all, cache: true
#### stylesheet_path
-Computes the path to a stylesheet asset in the `app/assets/stylesheets` directory. If the source filename has no extension, .css will be appended. Full paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by stylesheet_link_tag to build the stylesheet path.
+Computes the path to a stylesheet asset in the `app/assets/stylesheets` directory. If the source filename has no extension, `.css` will be appended. Full paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by stylesheet_link_tag to build the stylesheet path.
```ruby
stylesheet_path "application" # => /assets/application.css
@@ -814,9 +809,9 @@ third:
Form helpers are designed to make working with models much easier compared to using just standard HTML elements by providing a set of methods for creating forms based on your models. This helper generates the HTML for forms, providing a method for each sort of input (e.g., text, password, select, and so on). When the form is submitted (i.e., when the user hits the submit button or form.submit is called via JavaScript), the form inputs will be bundled into the params object and passed back to the controller.
-There are two types of form helpers: those that specifically work with model attributes and those that don't. This helper deals with those that work with model attributes; to see an example of form helpers that don't work with model attributes, check the ActionView::Helpers::FormTagHelper documentation.
+There are two types of form helpers: those that specifically work with model attributes and those that don't. This helper deals with those that work with model attributes; to see an example of form helpers that don't work with model attributes, check the `ActionView::Helpers::FormTagHelper` documentation.
-The core method of this helper, form_for, gives you the ability to create a form for a model instance; for example, let's say that you have a model Person and want to create a new instance of it:
+The core method of this helper, `form_for`, gives you the ability to create a form for a model instance; for example, let's say that you have a model Person and want to create a new instance of it:
```html+erb
# Note: a @person variable will have been created in the controller (e.g. @person = Person.new)
@@ -858,7 +853,7 @@ check_box("article", "validated")
#### fields_for
-Creates a scope around a specific model object like form_for, but doesn't create the form tags themselves. This makes fields_for suitable for specifying additional model objects in the same form:
+Creates a scope around a specific model object like `form_for`, but doesn't create the form tags themselves. This makes `fields_for` suitable for specifying additional model objects in the same form:
```html+erb
<%= form_for @person, url: { action: "update" } do |person_form| %>
@@ -1152,7 +1147,7 @@ Returns a string of option tags that have been compiled by iterating over the `c
# options_from_collection_for_select(collection, value_method, text_method, selected = nil)
```
-For example, imagine a loop iterating over each person in @project.people to generate an input tag:
+For example, imagine a loop iterating over each person in `@project.people` to generate an input tag:
```ruby
options_from_collection_for_select(@project.people, "id", "name")
@@ -1453,7 +1448,7 @@ This sanitize helper will HTML encode all tags and strip all attributes that are
sanitize @article.body
```
-If either the :attributes or :tags options are passed, only the mentioned tags and attributes are allowed and nothing else.
+If either the `:attributes` or `:tags` options are passed, only the mentioned tags and attributes are allowed and nothing else.
```ruby
sanitize @article.body, tags: %w(table tr td), attributes: %w(id class style)
diff --git a/guides/source/active_record_querying.md b/guides/source/active_record_querying.md
index de976acd01..2f10bc4e7c 100644
--- a/guides/source/active_record_querying.md
+++ b/guides/source/active_record_querying.md
@@ -317,7 +317,7 @@ end
The `find_each` method accepts most of the options allowed by the regular `find` method, except for `:order` and `:limit`, which are reserved for internal use by `find_each`.
-Two additional options, `:batch_size` and `:begin_at`, are available as well.
+Three additional options, `:batch_size`, `:begin_at` and `:end_at`, are available as well.
**`:batch_size`**
@@ -348,7 +348,7 @@ Another example would be if you wanted multiple workers handling the same proces
Similar to the `:begin_at` option, `:end_at` allows you to configure the last ID of the sequence whenever the highest ID is not the one you need.
This would be useful, for example, if you wanted to run a batch process, using a subset of records based on `:begin_at` and `:end_at`
-For example, to send newsletters only to users with the primary key starting from 2000 up to 10000 and to retrieve them in batches of 1000:
+For example, to send newsletters only to users with the primary key starting from 2000 up to 10000 and to retrieve them in batches of 5000:
```ruby
User.find_each(begin_at: 2000, end_at: 10000, batch_size: 5000) do |user|
diff --git a/guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md b/guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md
index b385bdbe83..46c9013087 100644
--- a/guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md
+++ b/guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md
@@ -16,7 +16,8 @@ RDoc
----
The [Rails API documentation](http://api.rubyonrails.org) is generated with
-[RDoc](http://docs.seattlerb.org/rdoc/).
+[RDoc](http://docs.seattlerb.org/rdoc/). To generate it, make sure you are
+in the rails root directory, run `bundle install` and execute:
```bash
bundle exec rake rdoc
diff --git a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
index 716beb9178..782406659d 100644
--- a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ fragment caching. Rails provides by default fragment caching. In order to use
page and action caching, you will need to add `actionpack-page_caching` and
`actionpack-action_caching` to your Gemfile.
-To start playing with caching you'll want to ensure that `config.action_controller.perform_caching` is set to `true`, if you're running in development mode. This flag is normally set in the corresponding `config/environments/*.rb` and caching is disabled by default for development and test, and enabled for production.
+To start playing with caching you'll want to ensure that `config.action_controller.perform_caching` is set to `true` if you're running in development mode. This flag is normally set in the corresponding `config/environments/*.rb` and caching is disabled by default for development and test, and enabled for production.
```ruby
config.action_controller.perform_caching = true
@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ It's called "Russian Doll Caching" because it nests multiple fragments. The adva
### Low-Level Caching
-Sometimes you need to cache a particular value or query result, instead of caching view fragments. Rails caching mechanism works great for storing __any__ kind of information.
+Sometimes you need to cache a particular value or query result instead of caching view fragments. Rails' caching mechanism works great for storing __any__ kind of information.
The most efficient way to implement low-level caching is using the `Rails.cache.fetch` method. This method does both reading and writing to the cache. When passed only a single argument, the key is fetched and value from the cache is returned. If a block is passed, the result of the block will be cached to the given key and the result is returned.
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
end
```
-NOTE: Notice that in this example we used `cache_key` method, so the resulting cache-key will be something like `products/233-20140225082222765838000/competing_price`. `cache_key` generates a string based on the model’s `id` and `updated_at` attributes. This is a common convention and has the benefit of invalidating the cache whenever the product is updated. In general, when you use low-level caching for instance level information, you need to generate a cache key.
+NOTE: Notice that in this example we used the `cache_key` method, so the resulting cache-key will be something like `products/233-20140225082222765838000/competing_price`. `cache_key` generates a string based on the model’s `id` and `updated_at` attributes. This is a common convention and has the benefit of invalidating the cache whenever the product is updated. In general, when you use low-level caching for instance level information, you need to generate a cache key.
### SQL Caching
@@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ There are some common options used by all cache implementations. These can be pa
* `:compress` - This option can be used to indicate that compression should be used in the cache. This can be useful for transferring large cache entries over a slow network.
-* `:compress_threshold` - This options is used in conjunction with the `:compress` option to indicate a threshold under which cache entries should not be compressed. This defaults to 16 kilobytes.
+* `:compress_threshold` - This option is used in conjunction with the `:compress` option to indicate a threshold under which cache entries should not be compressed. This defaults to 16 kilobytes.
* `:expires_in` - This option sets an expiration time in seconds for the cache entry when it will be automatically removed from the cache.
@@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ There are some common options used by all cache implementations. These can be pa
### ActiveSupport::Cache::MemoryStore
-This cache store keeps entries in memory in the same Ruby process. The cache store has a bounded size specified by the `:size` options to the initializer (default is 32Mb). When the cache exceeds the allotted size, a cleanup will occur and the least recently used entries will be removed.
+This cache store keeps entries in memory in the same Ruby process. The cache store has a bounded size specified by the `:size` option to the initializer (default is 32Mb). When the cache exceeds the allotted size, a cleanup will occur and the least recently used entries will be removed.
```ruby
config.cache_store = :memory_store, { size: 64.megabytes }
@@ -243,7 +243,7 @@ This cache store uses the file system to store entries. The path to the director
config.cache_store = :file_store, "/path/to/cache/directory"
```
-With this cache store, multiple server processes on the same host can share a cache. Servers processes running on different hosts could share a cache by using a shared file system, but that set up would not be ideal and is not recommended. The cache store is appropriate for low to medium traffic sites that are served off one or two hosts.
+With this cache store, multiple server processes on the same host can share a cache. Server processes running on different hosts could share a cache by using a shared file system, but that set up would not be ideal and is not recommended. The cache store is appropriate for low to medium traffic sites that are served off one or two hosts.
Note that the cache will grow until the disk is full unless you periodically clear out old entries.
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ This cache store uses Danga's `memcached` server to provide a centralized cache
When initializing the cache, you need to specify the addresses for all memcached servers in your cluster. If none is specified, it will assume memcached is running on the local host on the default port, but this is not an ideal set up for larger sites.
-The `write` and `fetch` methods on this cache accept two additional options that take advantage of features specific to memcached. You can specify `:raw` to send a value directly to the server with no serialization. The value must be a string or number. You can use memcached direct operation like `increment` and `decrement` only on raw values. You can also specify `:unless_exist` if you don't want memcached to overwrite an existing entry.
+The `write` and `fetch` methods on this cache accept two additional options that take advantage of features specific to memcached. You can specify `:raw` to send a value directly to the server with no serialization. The value must be a string or number. You can use memcached direct operations like `increment` and `decrement` only on raw values. You can also specify `:unless_exist` if you don't want memcached to overwrite an existing entry.
```ruby
config.cache_store = :mem_cache_store, "cache-1.example.com", "cache-2.example.com"
@@ -293,7 +293,7 @@ For more information about Ehcache for JRuby and Rails, see [http://ehcache.org/
### ActiveSupport::Cache::NullStore
-This cache store implementation is meant to be used only in development or test environments and it never stores anything. This can be very useful in development when you have code that interacts directly with `Rails.cache`, but caching may interfere with being able to see the results of code changes. With this cache store, all `fetch` and `read` operations will result in a miss.
+This cache store implementation is meant to be used only in development or test environments and it never stores anything. This can be very useful in development when you have code that interacts directly with `Rails.cache` but caching may interfere with being able to see the results of code changes. With this cache store, all `fetch` and `read` operations will result in a miss.
```ruby
config.cache_store = :null_store
@@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ config.cache_store = :null_store
You can create your own custom cache store by simply extending `ActiveSupport::Cache::Store` and implementing the appropriate methods. In this way, you can swap in any number of caching technologies into your Rails application.
-To use a custom cache store, simple set the cache store to a new instance of the class.
+To use a custom cache store, simply set the cache store to a new instance of the class.
```ruby
config.cache_store = MyCacheStore.new
@@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ config.cache_store = MyCacheStore.new
### Cache Keys
-The keys used in a cache can be any object that responds to either `:cache_key` or to `:to_param`. You can implement the `:cache_key` method on your classes if you need to generate custom keys. Active Record will generate keys based on the class name and record id.
+The keys used in a cache can be any object that responds to either `:cache_key` or `:to_param`. You can implement the `:cache_key` method on your classes if you need to generate custom keys. Active Record will generate keys based on the class name and record id.
You can use Hashes and Arrays of values as cache keys.
@@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ class ProductsController < ApplicationController
end
```
-Instead of an options hash, you can also simply pass in a model, Rails will use the `updated_at` and `cache_key` methods for setting `last_modified` and `etag`:
+Instead of an options hash, you can also simply pass in a model. Rails will use the `updated_at` and `cache_key` methods for setting `last_modified` and `etag`:
```ruby
class ProductsController < ApplicationController
diff --git a/guides/source/configuring.md b/guides/source/configuring.md
index aa66376d5d..4da369be5e 100644
--- a/guides/source/configuring.md
+++ b/guides/source/configuring.md
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ numbers. New applications filter out passwords by adding the following `config.f
defaults to `:debug` for all environments. The available log levels are: `:debug`,
`:info`, `:warn`, `:error`, `:fatal`, and `:unknown`.
-* `config.log_tags` accepts a list of methods that the `request` object responds to. This makes it easy to tag log lines with debug information like subdomain and request id - both very helpful in debugging multi-user production applications.
+* `config.log_tags` accepts a list of: methods that the `request` object responds to, a `Proc` that accepts the `request` object, or something that responds to `to_s`. This makes it easy to tag log lines with debug information like subdomain and request id - both very helpful in debugging multi-user production applications.
* `config.logger` accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby `Logger` class. Defaults to an instance of `ActiveSupport::Logger`.
@@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:
* `config.active_support.bare` enables or disables the loading of `active_support/all` when booting Rails. Defaults to `nil`, which means `active_support/all` is loaded.
-* `config.active_support.test_order` sets the order that test cases are executed. Possible values are `:sorted` and `:random`. Currently defaults to `:sorted`. In Rails 5.0, the default will be changed to `:random` instead.
+* `config.active_support.test_order` sets the order that test cases are executed. Possible values are `:random` and `:sorted`. This option is set to `:random` in `config/environments/test.rb` in newly-generated applications. If you have an application that does not specify a `test_order`, it will default to `:sorted`, *until* Rails 5.0, when the default will become `:random`.
* `config.active_support.escape_html_entities_in_json` enables or disables the escaping of HTML entities in JSON serialization. Defaults to `false`.
diff --git a/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md b/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
index 7778b6c5e0..3d5f8906ca 100644
--- a/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
@@ -403,21 +403,27 @@ When you're happy with the code on your computer, you need to commit the changes
$ git commit -a
```
-At this point, your editor should be fired up and you can write a message for this commit. Well formatted and descriptive commit messages are extremely helpful for the others, especially when figuring out why given change was made, so please take the time to write it.
+This should fire up your editor to write a commit message. When you have
+finished, save and close to continue.
-Good commit message should be formatted according to the following example:
+A well-formatted and descriptive commit message is very helpful to others for
+understanding why the change was made, so please take the time to write it.
+
+A good commit message looks like this:
```
Short summary (ideally 50 characters or less)
-More detailed description, if necessary. It should be wrapped to 72
-characters. Try to be as descriptive as you can; even if you think that the
-commit content is obvious, it may not be obvious to others. Add any description
-that is already present in relevant issues - it should not be necessary to visit
-a webpage to check the history.
+More detailed description, if necessary. It should be wrapped to
+72 characters. Try to be as descriptive as you can. Even if you
+think that the commit content is obvious, it may not be obvious
+to others. Add any description that is already present in the
+relevant issues; it should not be necessary to visit a webpage
+to check the history.
+
+The description section can have multiple paragraphs.
-The description section can have multiple paragraphs. Code examples can be
-embedded by indenting them with 4 spaces:
+Code examples can be embedded by indenting them with 4 spaces:
class ArticlesController
def index
@@ -427,14 +433,15 @@ embedded by indenting them with 4 spaces:
You can also add bullet points:
-- you can use dashes or asterisks
+- make a bullet point by starting a line with either a dash (-)
+ or an asterisk (*)
-- also, try to indent next line of a point for readability, if it's too
- long to fit in 72 characters
+- wrap lines at 72 characters, and indent any additional lines
+ with 2 spaces for readability
```
TIP. Please squash your commits into a single commit when appropriate. This
-simplifies future cherry picks and also keeps the git log clean.
+simplifies future cherry picks and keeps the git log clean.
### Update Your Branch
diff --git a/guides/source/getting_started.md b/guides/source/getting_started.md
index bae2a1bd43..31168ff45e 100644
--- a/guides/source/getting_started.md
+++ b/guides/source/getting_started.md
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ application from scratch. It does not assume that you have any prior experience
with Rails. However, to get the most out of it, you need to have some
prerequisites installed:
-* The [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads) language version 1.9.3 or newer.
+* The [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads) language version 2.2.2 or newer.
* The [RubyGems](https://rubygems.org) packaging system, which is installed with Ruby
versions 1.9 and later. To learn more about RubyGems, please read the [RubyGems Guides](http://guides.rubygems.org).
* A working installation of the [SQLite3 Database](https://www.sqlite.org).
@@ -1240,10 +1240,7 @@ article we want to show the form back to the user.
We reuse the `article_params` method that we defined earlier for the create
action.
-TIP: You don't need to pass all attributes to `update`. For
-example, if you'd call `@article.update(title: 'A new title')`
-Rails would only update the `title` attribute, leaving all other
-attributes untouched.
+TIP: It is not necessary to pass all the attributes to `update`. For example, if `@article.update(title: 'A new title')` were called, Rails would only update the `title` attribute, leaving all other attributes untouched.
Finally, we want to show a link to the `edit` action in the list of all the
articles, so let's add that now to `app/views/articles/index.html.erb` to make
diff --git a/guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md b/guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md
index 1323742488..50866350f8 100644
--- a/guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md
+++ b/guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md
@@ -64,7 +64,9 @@ The guides and the API should be coherent and consistent where appropriate. In p
HTML Guides
-----------
-Before generating the guides, make sure that you have the latest version of Bundler installed on your system. As of this writing, you must install Bundler 1.3.5 on your device.
+Before generating the guides, make sure that you have the latest version of
+Bundler installed on your system. As of this writing, you must install Bundler
+1.3.5 or later on your device.
To install the latest version of Bundler, run `gem install bundler`.
@@ -82,6 +84,8 @@ or
bundle exec rake guides:generate:html
```
+Resulting HTML files can be found in the `./output` directory.
+
To process `my_guide.md` and nothing else use the `ONLY` environment variable:
```
diff --git a/guides/source/testing.md b/guides/source/testing.md
index f12daf0dbc..cc469f4dae 100644
--- a/guides/source/testing.md
+++ b/guides/source/testing.md
@@ -407,9 +407,49 @@ This test should now pass.
By now you've caught a glimpse of some of the assertions that are available. Assertions are the worker bees of testing. They are the ones that actually perform the checks to ensure that things are going as planned.
-There are a bunch of different types of assertions you can use that come with [`Minitest`](https://github.com/seattlerb/minitest), the default testing library used by Rails.
-
-For a list of all available assertions please check the [Minitest API documentation](http://docs.seattlerb.org/minitest/), specifically [`Minitest::Assertions`](http://docs.seattlerb.org/minitest/Minitest/Assertions.html)
+Here's an extract of the assertions you can use with
+[`Minitest`](https://github.com/seattlerb/minitest), the default testing library
+used by Rails. The `[msg]` parameter is an optional string message you can
+specify to make your test failure messages clearer. It's not required.
+
+| Assertion | Purpose |
+| ---------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- |
+| `assert( test, [msg] )` | Ensures that `test` is true.|
+| `assert_not( test, [msg] )` | Ensures that `test` is false.|
+| `assert_equal( expected, actual, [msg] )` | Ensures that `expected == actual` is true.|
+| `assert_not_equal( expected, actual, [msg] )` | Ensures that `expected != actual` is true.|
+| `assert_same( expected, actual, [msg] )` | Ensures that `expected.equal?(actual)` is true.|
+| `assert_not_same( expected, actual, [msg] )` | Ensures that `expected.equal?(actual)` is false.|
+| `assert_nil( obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj.nil?` is true.|
+| `assert_not_nil( obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj.nil?` is false.|
+| `assert_empty( obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is `empty?`.|
+| `assert_not_empty( obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is not `empty?`.|
+| `assert_match( regexp, string, [msg] )` | Ensures that a string matches the regular expression.|
+| `assert_no_match( regexp, string, [msg] )` | Ensures that a string doesn't match the regular expression.|
+| `assert_includes( collection, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is in `collection`.|
+| `assert_not_includes( collection, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is not in `collection`.|
+| `assert_in_delta( expecting, actual, [delta], [msg] )` | Ensures that the numbers `expected` and `actual` are within `delta` of each other.|
+| `assert_not_in_delta( expecting, actual, [delta], [msg] )` | Ensures that the numbers `expected` and `actual` are not within `delta` of each other.|
+| `assert_throws( symbol, [msg] ) { block }` | Ensures that the given block throws the symbol.|
+| `assert_raises( exception1, exception2, ... ) { block }` | Ensures that the given block raises one of the given exceptions.|
+| `assert_nothing_raised( exception1, exception2, ... ) { block }` | Ensures that the given block doesn't raise one of the given exceptions.|
+| `assert_instance_of( class, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is an instance of `class`.|
+| `assert_not_instance_of( class, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is not an instance of `class`.|
+| `assert_kind_of( class, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is or descends from `class`.|
+| `assert_not_kind_of( class, obj, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` is not an instance of `class` and is not descending from it.|
+| `assert_respond_to( obj, symbol, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` responds to `symbol`.|
+| `assert_not_respond_to( obj, symbol, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj` does not respond to `symbol`.|
+| `assert_operator( obj1, operator, [obj2], [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj1.operator(obj2)` is true.|
+| `assert_not_operator( obj1, operator, [obj2], [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj1.operator(obj2)` is false.|
+| `assert_predicate ( obj, predicate, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj.predicate` is true, e.g. `assert_predicate str, :empty?`|
+| `assert_not_predicate ( obj, predicate, [msg] )` | Ensures that `obj.predicate` is false, e.g. `assert_not_predicate str, :empty?`|
+| `assert_send( array, [msg] )` | Ensures that executing the method listed in `array[1]` on the object in `array[0]` with the parameters of `array[2 and up]` is true. This one is weird eh?|
+| `flunk( [msg] )` | Ensures failure. This is useful to explicitly mark a test that isn't finished yet.|
+
+The above are a subset of assertions that minitest supports. For an exhaustive &
+more up-to-date list, please check
+[Minitest API documentation](http://docs.seattlerb.org/minitest/), specifically
+[`Minitest::Assertions`](http://docs.seattlerb.org/minitest/Minitest/Assertions.html)
Because of the modular nature of the testing framework, it is possible to create your own assertions. In fact, that's exactly what Rails does. It includes some specialized assertions to make your life easier.