This adds support for templated tests and test methods via
`TEMPLATE_TEST_CASE` and `TEMPLATE_TEST_CASE_METHOD` macros. These
work mostly just like their regular counterparts*, but take an
unlimited** number of types as their last arguments.
* Unlike the plain `TEST_CASE*` macros, the `TEMPLATE*` variants
require a tag string.
** In practice there is limit of about 300 types.
By default, it expands into a `static_assert` + `SUCCEED` pair, but
it can also be deferred to runtime by defining
`CATCH_CONFIG_RUNTIME_STATIC_REQUIRE`, which causes it to expand
into plain old `REQUIRE`.
Closes#1362Closes#1356
issue #1360
It is possible to have multple given contexts in a single BDD scenario;
if you have to type 'and' in the GIVEN description; it's very likely you
need an AND.
A generic AND is not possible, thus a AND_GIVEN is added to complement
the AND_WHEN and AND_THEN.
Can be used without needing to increase indent:
SCENARIO("...") {
GIVEN("...")
AND_GIVEN("...") {
WHEN("...") {
THEN("...") {
// ...
}
}
}
}
would correctly output, when requested/needed:
Given: ...
And given: ...
When: ...
Then: ...
The padding had to be increased by a character in the output message, to
continue to be uniform.
The support is to be considered experimental, that is, the interfaces,
the first party generators and helper functions can change or be removed
at any point in time.
Related to #850
* Assertions are defined into (void)(0) no-op
* SECTIONs are defined away (leaving {} as scope)
* TEST_CASEs and TEST_CASE_METHODs are not registered.
* REGISTER_TEST_CASE is defined into (void)(0) no-op
* METHOD_AS_TEST_CASE is defined away
- this file excluded from the CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_MATCHERS path.
- matchers are always compiled in to the impl file
- _THROWS_WITH macros are still available with matchers disabled - but only the ones that take a string
- tests that use matchers have #ifdefs, so the whole SelfTest project can compile with matchers disable.
The toggle is `CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_MATCHERS` and the only use is
to speed up compilation of small TUs. For large ones it is likely
insignificant, because the speed up is constant relative to
number of tests/assertions in TU.