In Rspec world, you often see people using both “describe” blocks and “context” blocks together, like this

describe "launch the rocket" do context "all ready" do end context "not ready" do end end

So what’s the difference between “describe” and “context” really?

According to the rspec source code, “context” is just a alias method of “describe”, meaning that there is no functional difference between these two methods. However, there is a contextual difference that’ll help to make your tests more understandable by using both of them.

The purpose of “describe” is to wrap a set of tests against one functionality while “context” is to wrap a set of tests against one functionality under the same state. Here’s an example

describe "launch the rocket" do before(:each) do #prepare a rocket for all of the tests @rocket = Rocket.new end context "all ready" do before(:each) do #under the state of ready @rocket.ready = true end it "launch the rocket" do @rocket.launch().should be_true end end context "not ready" do before(:each) do #under the state of NOT ready @rocket.ready = false end it "does not launch the rocket" do @rocket.launch().should be_false end end end

This code is more readable than wrapping all the stuffs with “describe” blocks. Because when you read the tests under “context”, you know they are all testing the same thing the “describe” talk about. And you know a “context” is to setup the state of your object, in this case @rocket.ready which will effects the behavior of @rocket.launch() that gives you a conclusion, right away, without scanning the code back and forth.