catch2/projects/SelfTest/UsageTests/Generators.tests.cpp

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#include "catch.hpp"
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#include <cstring>
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// Generators and sections can be nested freely
TEST_CASE("Generators -- simple", "[generators]") {
auto i = GENERATE(1, 2, 3);
SECTION("one") {
auto j = GENERATE(values({ -3, -2, -1 }));
REQUIRE(j < i);
}
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SECTION("two") {
// You can also explicitly set type for generators via Catch::Generators::as
auto str = GENERATE(as<std::string>{}, "a", "bb", "ccc");
REQUIRE(4u * i > str.size());
}
}
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// You can create a cartesian-product of generators by creating multiple ones
TEST_CASE("3x3x3 ints", "[generators]") {
auto x = GENERATE(1, 2, 3);
auto y = GENERATE(4, 5, 6);
auto z = GENERATE(7, 8, 9);
// These assertions will be run 27 times (3x3x3)
CHECK(x < y);
CHECK(y < z);
REQUIRE(x < z);
}
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// You can also create data tuples
TEST_CASE("tables", "[generators]") {
// Note that this will not compile with libstdc++ older than libstdc++6
// See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12436586/tuple-vector-and-initializer-list
// for possible workarounds
// auto data = GENERATE(table<char const*, int>({
// {"first", 5},
// {"second", 6},
// {"third", 5},
// {"etc...", 6}
// }));
// Workaround for the libstdc++ bug mentioned above
using tuple_type = std::tuple<char const*, int>;
auto data = GENERATE(table<char const*, int>({
tuple_type{"first", 5},
tuple_type{"second", 6},
tuple_type{"third", 5},
tuple_type{"etc...", 6}
}));
REQUIRE(strlen(std::get<0>(data)) == static_cast<size_t>(std::get<1>(data)));
}
#ifdef __cpp_structured_bindings
// Structured bindings make the table utility much nicer to use
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TEST_CASE( "strlen2", "[approvals][generators]" ) {
auto [test_input, expected] = GENERATE( table<std::string, size_t>({
{"one", 3},
{"two", 3},
{"three", 5},
{"four", 4}
}));
REQUIRE( test_input.size() == expected );
}
#endif
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// An alternate way of doing data tables without structured bindings
struct Data { std::string str; size_t len; };
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TEST_CASE( "strlen3", "[generators]" ) {
auto data = GENERATE( values<Data>({
{"one", 3},
{"two", 3},
{"three", 5},
{"four", 4}
}));
REQUIRE( data.str.size() == data.len );
}
#ifdef __cpp_structured_bindings
// Based on example from https://docs.cucumber.io/gherkin/reference/#scenario-outline
// (thanks to https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/issues/850#issuecomment-399504851)
// Note that GIVEN, WHEN, and THEN now forward onto DYNAMIC_SECTION instead of SECTION.
// DYNAMIC_SECTION takes its name as a stringstream-style expression, so can be formatted using
// variables in scope - such as the generated variables here. This reads quite nicely in the
// test name output (the full scenario description).
static auto eatCucumbers( int start, int eat ) -> int { return start-eat; }
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SCENARIO("Eating cucumbers", "[generators][approvals]") {
auto [start, eat, left] = GENERATE( table<int,int,int> ({
{ 12, 5, 7 },
{ 20, 5, 15 }
}));
GIVEN( "there are " << start << " cucumbers" )
WHEN( "I eat " << eat << " cucumbers" )
THEN( "I should have " << left << " cucumbers" ) {
REQUIRE( eatCucumbers( start, eat ) == left );
}
}
#endif
// There are also some generic generator manipulators
TEST_CASE("Generators -- adapters", "[generators][generic]") {
// TODO: This won't work yet, introduce GENERATE_VAR?
//auto numbers = Catch::Generators::values({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 });
SECTION("Filtering by predicate") {
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SECTION("Basic usage") {
// This filters out all odd (false) numbers, giving [2, 4, 6]
auto i = GENERATE(filter([] (int val) { return val % 2 == 0; }, values({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 })));
REQUIRE(i % 2 == 0);
}
SECTION("Throws if there are no matching values") {
using namespace Catch::Generators;
REQUIRE_THROWS_AS(filter([] (int) {return false; }, value(1)), Catch::GeneratorException);
}
}
SECTION("Shortening a range") {
// This takes the first 3 elements from the values, giving back [1, 2, 3]
auto i = GENERATE(take(3, values({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 })));
REQUIRE(i < 4);
}
SECTION("Transforming elements") {
SECTION("Same type") {
// This doubles values [1, 2, 3] into [2, 4, 6]
auto i = GENERATE(map([] (int val) { return val * 2; }, values({ 1, 2, 3 })));
REQUIRE(i % 2 == 0);
}
SECTION("Different type") {
// This takes a generator that returns ints and maps them into strings
auto i = GENERATE(map<std::string>([] (int val) { return std::to_string(val); }, values({ 1, 2, 3 })));
REQUIRE(i.size() == 1);
}
SECTION("Different deduced type") {
// This takes a generator that returns ints and maps them into strings
auto i = GENERATE(map([] (int val) { return std::to_string(val); }, values({ 1, 2, 3 })));
REQUIRE(i.size() == 1);
}
}
SECTION("Repeating a generator") {
// This will return values [1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]
auto j = GENERATE(repeat(2, values({ 1, 2, 3 })));
REQUIRE(j > 0);
}
SECTION("Chunking a generator into sized pieces") {
SECTION("Number of elements in source is divisible by chunk size") {
auto chunk2 = GENERATE(chunk(2, values({ 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3 })));
REQUIRE(chunk2.size() == 2);
REQUIRE(chunk2.front() == chunk2.back());
}
SECTION("Number of elements in source is not divisible by chunk size") {
auto chunk2 = GENERATE(chunk(2, values({ 1, 1, 2, 2, 3 })));
REQUIRE(chunk2.size() == 2);
REQUIRE(chunk2.front() == chunk2.back());
REQUIRE(chunk2.front() < 3);
}
SECTION("Chunk size of zero") {
auto chunk2 = GENERATE(take(3, chunk(0, value(1))));
REQUIRE(chunk2.size() == 0);
}
SECTION("Throws on too small generators") {
using namespace Catch::Generators;
REQUIRE_THROWS_AS(chunk(2, value(1)), Catch::GeneratorException);
}
}
}
// Note that because of the non-reproducibility of distributions,
// anything involving the random generators cannot be part of approvals
TEST_CASE("Random generator", "[generators][approvals]") {
SECTION("Infer int from integral arguments") {
auto val = GENERATE(take(4, random(0, 1)));
STATIC_REQUIRE(std::is_same<decltype(val), int>::value);
REQUIRE(0 <= val);
REQUIRE(val <= 1);
}
SECTION("Infer double from double arguments") {
auto val = GENERATE(take(4, random(0., 1.)));
STATIC_REQUIRE(std::is_same<decltype(val), double>::value);
REQUIRE(0. <= val);
REQUIRE(val < 1);
}
}
TEST_CASE("Nested generators and captured variables", "[generators]") {
// Workaround for old libstdc++
using record = std::tuple<int, int>;
// Set up 3 ranges to generate numbers from
auto extent = GENERATE(table<int, int>({
record{3, 7},
record{-5, -3},
record{90, 100}
}));
auto from = std::get<0>(extent);
auto to = std::get<1>(extent);
auto values = GENERATE_COPY(range(from, to));
REQUIRE(values > -6);
}
namespace {
std::vector<int> make_data() {
return { 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 };
}
}
#if defined(__clang__)
#pragma clang diagnostic push
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wexit-time-destructors"
#endif
TEST_CASE("Copy and then generate a range", "[generators]") {
static auto data = make_data();
// It is important to notice that a generator is only initialized
// **once** per run. What this means is that modifying data will not
// modify the underlying generator.
auto elem = GENERATE_REF(from_range(data.begin(), data.end()));
REQUIRE(elem % 2 == 1);
}
#if defined(__clang__)
#pragma clang diagnostic pop
#endif