Yes, Javier's interpretation is mine too. 'skip' means skip by default, if the case or suite is explicitly called, it should be run. This allows you to work on a test and not remove the 'skip' until it is ready for inclusion. Or in Ubiquity's case, to run the test when explicitly called on not in a general Mago run.
Yes, Javier's interpretation is mine too. 'skip' means skip by default, if the case or suite is explicitly called, it should be run. This allows you to work on a test and not remove the 'skip' until it is ready for inclusion. Or in Ubiquity's case, to run the test when explicitly called on not in a general Mago run.