This generator collects values from the underlying generator until it
has a specified amount of them, and then returns them in one "chunk".
In case the underlying generator does not have enough elements for
a specific chunk, the left-over elements are discarded.
Closes#1538
This captures the intent better, as some changes are indeed plain
deprecations leading to removal, but other changes can be viewed
as minor tune-ups instead.
The previous implemetation was just plain broken for most of
possible uses, the new one should work (even though it is ugly
as all hell, and should be improved ASAP).
Fixes#1436
Since https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/pull/1405 was merged and propagated to the single include declaring a user operator<< in the global namespace makes it available to Catch2 string converters.
This variable is set to allow the use of the nice ParseAndAddCatchTests script
in the case where a launcher is needed to execute the script.
This is introduced to allow to launch unit tests using mpi. In this case one can
write for instance
set(OptionalCatchTestLauncher ${MPIEXEC} ${MPIEXEC_NUMPROC_FLAG} ${NUMPROC})
before calling the ParseAndAddCatchTests function.
Prevent warnings
- gnu: -Wcomment: multi-line comment
- clang: -Wweak-vtables 'class' has no out-of-line virtual method definitions; its vtable will be emitted in every translation unit
- clang: -Winconsistent-missing-override: 'method' overrides a member function but is not marked 'override'
- MSVC: C4702: unreachable code
This fixes some wording that implies C++98 standard, updates
the recommended solution to looped SECTION macros and mentioned
the "last section failed, test needs to be rerun" problem.
Related to #1367
Related to #1384
Related to #1389
This might prove helpful when the package managers either doesn't
have Catch at all, or provides it in obsolete version (Ubuntu 16.04,
I am looking at you).
Closes#1383
The "percentage" suggests that the expected epsilon can be in
[0, 100], but the expected values are in [0, 1]. The new wording
uses "coefficient", to make it clearer that we are talking about
values in [0, 1].
Closes#1388