This means that if you nest multiple random generators inside one
test case, they will not return the same sequence of numbers.
Idea taken from #1736 by Amit Herman.
Closes#1736Closes#1734
In the future, we will also want to introduce our own
`uniform_int_distribution` and `uniform_real_distribution` to get
repeatable test runs across different platforms.
Wrong nesting of namespaces resulted in the `Catch` namespace
being ambigous between `::Catch` and `::{anon}::Catch` namespaces.
This should fix it.
Closes#1761
Instead, let it be installed as a dependency of `conan-package-tools`
to avoid trouble with the fact that pip is really bad at version
resolution, and that up-to-date version of the `conan` package is not
supported by up-to-date version of the `conan-package-tools` package.
It was used in checking that types in TEMPLATE_TEST_CASE and friends
were unique, but this was removed for v2.8.0 (#1628). Since there
are no further uses of this trait, the simplest thing to do is to
just remove it.
Fixes#1757
The leading/trailing whitespace is problematic because of e.g.
`WHEN` macro having preceeding whitespace for alignment, and it is
generally messy.
Credits to Phil who did lot of the original work.
Closes#1708
This way it is explicit when there is a `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion and makes it easier to look for allocations that could
be avoided.
Doing this has already removed one allocation per registered test
case, as there was a completely pointless `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion when parsing tags of a test case.
The old code was a left-over from the times when the
`capturedExpression` member was a `const char*`, which could always
be indexed. With the change to use `StringRef`, blindly indexing 0th
element is invalid, as it is not indexable part of a StringRef.
The parameter given to `convert` may not be copyable therefore it has to be
captured by const reference. For example an `std::tuple` that contains a
non-copyable type is itself non-copyable.
The NonDefaultConstructible test-case was reduced by one example type
because it did not add any value.
`print` version of the logging functions supports `printf`-like
formatting, which we do not use and given our current debug print
internals, will never use. This should be slightly more efficient
and expresses the intent better.