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.
C++11 math requires _GLIBCXX_USE_C99_MATH_TR1 to be true with gcc/clang.
Also fixes an issue with uClibc-ng where __UCLIBC__ is defined in features.h but
that is not included here and is thus no-op.
- Overrides added
- usages of push_back() replaced with emplace_back()
- Loop variable made const-refernce
- NULL replaced with nullptr
- Names used in the declaration and definition unified
- size() replaced with empty
- Identical cases merged
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
Copying a `ReusableStringStream` would lead to "double free" of
the stream, and thus it could be used in multiple places at the
same time, breaking the output.
On systems where std::chrono::steady_clock::period is not std::nano, benchmark tests fail to compile due to trying to convert analysis.samples from a vector of duration<double, clock::period> to a vector of std::chrono::duration<double, std::nano>.
Its intent was to show which headers are expected to be useable by
Catch2's users, and to enforce their inclusion in the single header
distribution at the right place.
Given the new library model, the second use case is not needed and
the first one is better served with documentation and physical file
layout.
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.
The use we previously used the polyfill or naked new is that we
supported C++11, which did not yet have `std::make_unique`. However,
with the move to C++14 as the minimum, `std::make_unique` can be
expected to be always available.
Because some of the tooling used by Catch2 does not properly support
version postfixes, such as `preview-1`, we will report the
in-development version is `v3.0.0`, and the first real release will
have to be `v3.0.1`.
Closes#1824
Now that the recommended distribution and usage method is proper
library, users can just avoid including the matcher headers to get
basically the same effect.