It did not clear out all of its internal state when switching from
one pattern to another, so when it should've escaped `,`, it took
its position from its position in the original user-provided string,
rather than its position in the current pattern.
Fixes#1905
`SizeIs` can accept both `size_t` and a matcher. In the first case,
it checks whether the size of the range is equal to specified size.
In the second case, it checks whether the provided matcher accepts
the size of the range.
This commit also forbids composing lvalues of composed matchers, as
per previous deprecation notice. I do not expect this to be contentious
in practice, because there was a bug in that usage for years, and
nobody complained.
Given that in the 2 or so years that matchers are thing nobody complained,
it seems that people do not actually write this sort of code, and the
possibility will be removed in v3. However, to avoid correctness bugs,
we will have to support this weird code in v2.
This commit extends the Matchers feature with the ability to have type-independent (e.g. templated) matchers. This is done by adding a new base type that Matchers can extend, `MatcherGenericBase`, and overloads of operators `!`, `&&` and `||` that handle matchers extending `MatcherGenericBase` in a special manner.
These new matchers can also take their arguments as values and non-const references.
Closes#1307Closes#1553Closes#1554
Co-authored-by: Martin Hořeňovský <martin.horenovsky@gmail.com>
b77cec05c0 fixed this problem for tagging tests, so that a test
case tagged with `[.foo]` would be parsed as tagged with `[.][foo]`.
This does the same for the test spec parsing.
Fixes#1798
Now that Catch2 is a proper library, we can always build the full
library (comparatively minor slowdown) and the user can avoid
including benchmarking headers to avoid the compilation slowdown.