No matcher actually uses it, and there is no good reason for it,
as the best it can do for user is removing a single indirection
when using the pointer inside the matcher. Given the overhead of
other code that will be running during such time, it is completely
meaningless.
This also fixes compilation for PredicateMatcher<const char*>.
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
Previously a mismatched prefix would be skipped before the actual
comparison would be performed. Obviously, it is supposed to be
_matching_ prefix that is skipped.
Happening when using clang and templated operators, clang cannot decide
between the operator provided by ReusableStringStream and the one provided
by the value value as both are templates. This is easily solved by calling
the operator<< through the member syntax.
Fixes#1285
This support is based on overriden `std::exception::what` method, so
if an exception does not do so meaningfully, the message is still
pointless.
This is only used as a fallback, both `StringMaker` specialization and
`operator<<` overload have priority..
The fix leaves an open question: should we keep treating refs
to static array of chars as strings, or should we instead
use `strnlen` to check if it is null-terminated within the buffer
Fixes#1238
There are still some holes, e.g. we leave surrogate pairs be
even though they are not a part of valid UTF-8, but this might
be for the better -- WTF-8 does support surrogate pairs inside
text.
Closes#1207
DJGPP cross compiler is targeting DOS which does not support POSIX
signals. Probably for the same reason (targeting DOS) this compiler
does not support wide characters.
This allows reducing the amount of friends needed for its interface
and some extra tricks later.
The bad part is that the pointer can become invalidated via
calls to other StringRef's public methods, but c'est la vie.