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Co-authored-by: Martin Hořeňovský <martin.horenovsky@gmail.com>
441 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
441 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
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# Matchers
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**Contents**<br>
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[Using Matchers](#using-matchers)<br>
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[Built-in matchers](#built-in-matchers)<br>
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[Writing custom matchers (old style)](#writing-custom-matchers-old-style)<br>
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[Writing custom matchers (new style)](#writing-custom-matchers-new-style)<br>
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Matchers, as popularized by the [Hamcrest](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamcrest)
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framework are an alternative way to write assertions, useful for tests
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where you work with complex types or need to assert more complex
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properties. Matchers are easily composable and users can write their
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own and combine them with the Catch2-provided matchers seamlessly.
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## Using Matchers
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Matchers are most commonly used in tandem with the `REQUIRE_THAT` or
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`CHECK_THAT` macros. The `REQUIRE_THAT` macro takes two arguments,
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the first one is the input (object/value) to test, the second argument
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is the matcher itself.
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For example, to assert that a string ends with the "as a service"
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substring, you can write the following assertion
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```cpp
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using Catch::Matchers::EndsWith;
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REQUIRE_THAT( getSomeString(), EndsWith("as a service") );
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```
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Individual matchers can also be combined using the C++ logical
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operators, that is `&&`, `||`, and `!`, like so:
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```cpp
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using Catch::Matchers::EndsWith;
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using Catch::Matchers::ContainsSubstring;
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REQUIRE_THAT( getSomeString(),
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EndsWith("as a service") && ContainsSubstring("web scale"));
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```
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The example above asserts that the string returned from `getSomeString`
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_both_ ends with the suffix "as a service" _and_ contains the string
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"web scale" somewhere.
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Both of the string matchers used in the examples above live in the
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`catch_matchers_string.hpp` header, so to compile the code above also
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requires `#include <catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_string.hpp>`.
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**IMPORTANT**: The combining operators do not take ownership of the
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matcher objects being combined. This means that if you store combined
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matcher object, you have to ensure that the matchers being combined
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outlive its last use. What this means is that the following code leads
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to a use-after-free (UAF):
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```cpp
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#include <catch2/catch_test_macros.hpp>
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#include <catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_string.hpp>
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TEST_CASE("Bugs, bugs, bugs", "[Bug]"){
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std::string str = "Bugs as a service";
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auto match_expression = Catch::Matchers::EndsWith( "as a service" ) ||
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(Catch::Matchers::StartsWith( "Big data" ) && !Catch::Matchers::ContainsSubstring( "web scale" ) );
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REQUIRE_THAT(str, match_expression);
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}
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```
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## Built-in matchers
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Every matcher provided by Catch2 is split into 2 parts, a factory
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function that lives in the `Catch::Matchers` namespace, and the actual
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matcher type that is in some deeper namespace and should not be used by
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the user. In the examples above, we used `Catch::Matchers::Contains`.
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This is the factory function for the
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`Catch::Matchers::StdString::ContainsMatcher` type that does the actual
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matching.
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Out of the box, Catch2 provides the following matchers:
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### `std::string` matchers
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Catch2 provides 5 different matchers that work with `std::string`,
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* `StartsWith(std::string str, CaseSensitive)`,
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* `EndsWith(std::string str, CaseSensitive)`,
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* `ContainsSubstring(std::string str, CaseSensitive)`,
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* `Equals(std::string str, CaseSensitive)`, and
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* `Matches(std::string str, CaseSensitive)`.
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The first three should be fairly self-explanatory, they succeed if
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the argument starts with `str`, ends with `str`, or contains `str`
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somewhere inside it.
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The `Equals` matcher matches a string if (and only if) the argument
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string is equal to `str`.
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Finally, the `Matches` matcher performs an ECMAScript regex match using
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`str` against the argument string. It is important to know that
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the match is performed against the string as a whole, meaning that
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the regex `"abc"` will not match input string `"abcd"`. To match
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`"abcd"`, you need to use e.g. `"abc.*"` as your regex.
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The second argument sets whether the matching should be case-sensitive
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or not. By default, it is case-sensitive.
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> `std::string` matchers live in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_string.hpp`
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### Vector matchers
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_Vector matchers have been deprecated in favour of the generic
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range matchers with the same functionality._
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Catch2 provides 5 built-in matchers that work on `std::vector`.
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These are
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* `Contains` which checks whether a specified vector is present in the result
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* `VectorContains` which checks whether a specified element is present in the result
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* `Equals` which checks whether the result is exactly equal (order matters) to a specific vector
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* `UnorderedEquals` which checks whether the result is equal to a specific vector under a permutation
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* `Approx` which checks whether the result is "approx-equal" (order matters, but comparison is done via `Approx`) to a specific vector
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> Approx matcher was [introduced](https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/issues/1499) in Catch2 2.7.2.
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An example usage:
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```cpp
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std::vector<int> some_vec{ 1, 2, 3 };
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REQUIRE_THAT(some_vec, Catch::Matchers::UnorderedEquals(std::vector<int>{ 3, 2, 1 }));
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```
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This assertions will pass, because the elements given to the matchers
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are a permutation of the ones in `some_vec`.
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> vector matchers live in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_vector.hpp`
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### Floating point matchers
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Catch2 provides 4 matchers that target floating point numbers. These
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are:
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* `WithinAbs(double target, double margin)`,
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* `WithinULP(FloatingPoint target, uint64_t maxUlpDiff)`, and
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* `WithinRel(FloatingPoint target, FloatingPoint eps)`.
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* `IsNaN()`
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> `WithinRel` matcher was introduced in Catch2 2.10.0
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> `IsNaN` matcher was introduced in Catch2 3.3.2.
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The first three serve to compare two floating pointe numbers. For more
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details about how they work, read [the docs on comparing floating point
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numbers](comparing-floating-point-numbers.md#floating-point-matchers).
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`IsNaN` then does exactly what it says on the tin. It matches the input
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if it is a NaN (Not a Number). The advantage of using it over just plain
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`REQUIRE(std::isnan(x))`, is that if the check fails, with `REQUIRE` you
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won't see the value of `x`, but with `REQUIRE_THAT(x, IsNaN())`, you will.
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### Miscellaneous matchers
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Catch2 also provides some matchers and matcher utilities that do not
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quite fit into other categories.
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The first one of them is the `Predicate(Callable pred, std::string description)`
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matcher. It creates a matcher object that calls `pred` for the provided
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argument. The `description` argument allows users to set what the
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resulting matcher should self-describe as if required.
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Do note that you will need to explicitly specify the type of the
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argument, like in this example:
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```cpp
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REQUIRE_THAT("Hello olleH",
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Predicate<std::string>(
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[] (std::string const& str) -> bool { return str.front() == str.back(); },
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"First and last character should be equal")
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);
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```
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> the predicate matcher lives in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_predicate.hpp`
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The other miscellaneous matcher utility is exception matching.
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#### Matching exceptions
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Catch2 provides a utility macro for asserting that an expression
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throws exception of specific type, and that the exception has desired
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properties. The macro is `REQUIRE_THROWS_MATCHES(expr, ExceptionType, Matcher)`.
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> `REQUIRE_THROWS_MATCHES` macro lives in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers.hpp`
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Catch2 currently provides two matchers for exceptions.
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These are:
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* `Message(std::string message)`.
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* `MessageMatches(Matcher matcher)`.
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> `MessageMatches` was [introduced](https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/pull/2570) in Catch2 3.3.0
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`Message` checks that the exception's
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message, as returned from `what` is exactly equal to `message`.
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`MessageMatches` applies the provided matcher on the exception's
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message, as returned from `what`. This is useful in conjunctions with the `std::string` matchers (e.g. `StartsWith`)
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Example use:
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```cpp
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REQUIRE_THROWS_MATCHES(throwsDerivedException(), DerivedException, Message("DerivedException::what"));
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REQUIRE_THROWS_MATCHES(throwsDerivedException(), DerivedException, MessageMatches(StartsWith("DerivedException")));
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```
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Note that `DerivedException` in the example above has to derive from
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`std::exception` for the example to work.
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> the exception message matcher lives in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_exception.hpp`
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### Generic range Matchers
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> Generic range matchers were introduced in Catch2 3.0.1
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Catch2 also provides some matchers that use the new style matchers
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definitions to handle generic range-like types. These are:
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* `IsEmpty()`
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* `SizeIs(size_t target_size)`
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* `SizeIs(Matcher size_matcher)`
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* `Contains(T&& target_element, Comparator = std::equal_to<>{})`
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* `Contains(Matcher element_matcher)`
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* `AllMatch(Matcher element_matcher)`
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* `AnyMatch(Matcher element_matcher)`
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* `NoneMatch(Matcher element_matcher)`
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* `AllTrue()`, `AnyTrue()`, `NoneTrue()`
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* `RangeEquals(TargetRangeLike&&, Comparator = std::equal_to<>{})`
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* `UnorderedRangeEquals(TargetRangeLike&&, Comparator = std::equal_to<>{})`
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> `IsEmpty`, `SizeIs`, `Contains` were introduced in Catch2 3.0.1
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> `All/Any/NoneMatch` were introduced in Catch2 3.0.1
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> `All/Any/NoneTrue` were introduced in Catch2 3.1.0
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> `RangeEquals` and `UnorderedRangeEquals` matchers were [introduced](https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/pull/2377) in Catch2 3.3.0
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`IsEmpty` should be self-explanatory. It successfully matches objects
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that are empty according to either `std::empty`, or ADL-found `empty`
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free function.
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`SizeIs` checks range's size. If constructed with `size_t` arg, the
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matchers accepts ranges whose size is exactly equal to the arg. If
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constructed from another matcher, then the resulting matcher accepts
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ranges whose size is accepted by the provided matcher.
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`Contains` accepts ranges that contain specific element. There are
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again two variants, one that accepts the desired element directly,
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in which case a range is accepted if any of its elements is equal to
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the target element. The other variant is constructed from a matcher,
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in which case a range is accepted if any of its elements is accepted
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by the provided matcher.
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`AllMatch`, `NoneMatch`, and `AnyMatch` match ranges for which either
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all, none, or any of the contained elements matches the given matcher,
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respectively.
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`AllTrue`, `NoneTrue`, and `AnyTrue` match ranges for which either
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all, none, or any of the contained elements are `true`, respectively.
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It works for ranges of `bool`s and ranges of elements (explicitly)
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convertible to `bool`.
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`RangeEquals` compares the range that the matcher is constructed with
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(the "target range") against the range to be tested, element-wise. The
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match succeeds if all elements from the two ranges compare equal (using
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`operator==` by default). The ranges do not need to be the same type,
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and the element types do not need to be the same, as long as they are
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comparable. (e.g. you may compare `std::vector<int>` to `std::array<char>`).
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`UnorderedRangeEquals` is similar to `RangeEquals`, but the order
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does not matter. For example "1, 2, 3" would match "3, 2, 1", but not
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"1, 1, 2, 3" As with `RangeEquals`, `UnorderedRangeEquals` compares
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the individual elements using `operator==` by default.
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Both `RangeEquals` and `UnorderedRangeEquals` optionally accept a
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predicate which can be used to compare the containers element-wise.
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To check a container elementwise against a given matcher, use
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`AllMatch`.
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## Writing custom matchers (old style)
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The old style of writing matchers has been introduced back in Catch
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Classic. To create an old-style matcher, you have to create your own
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type that derives from `Catch::Matchers::MatcherBase<ArgT>`, where
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`ArgT` is the type your matcher works for. Your type has to override
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two methods, `bool match(ArgT const&) const`,
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and `std::string describe() const`.
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As the name suggests, `match` decides whether the provided argument
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is matched (accepted) by the matcher. `describe` then provides a
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human-oriented description of what the matcher does.
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We also recommend that you create factory function, just like Catch2
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does, but that is mostly useful for template argument deduction for
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templated matchers (assuming you do not have CTAD available).
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To combine these into an example, let's say that you want to write
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a matcher that decides whether the provided argument is a number
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within certain range. We will call it `IsBetweenMatcher<T>`:
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```c++
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#include <catch2/catch_test_macros.hpp>
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#include <catch2/matchers/catch_matchers.hpp>
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// ...
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template <typename T>
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class IsBetweenMatcher : public Catch::Matchers::MatcherBase<T> {
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T m_begin, m_end;
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public:
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IsBetweenMatcher(T begin, T end) : m_begin(begin), m_end(end) {}
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bool match(T const& in) const override {
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return in >= m_begin && in <= m_end;
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}
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std::string describe() const override {
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std::ostringstream ss;
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ss << "is between " << m_begin << " and " << m_end;
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return ss.str();
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}
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};
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template <typename T>
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IsBetweenMatcher<T> IsBetween(T begin, T end) {
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return { begin, end };
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}
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// ...
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TEST_CASE("Numbers are within range") {
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// infers `double` for the argument type of the matcher
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CHECK_THAT(3., IsBetween(1., 10.));
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// infers `int` for the argument type of the matcher
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CHECK_THAT(100, IsBetween(1, 10));
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}
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```
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Obviously, the code above can be improved somewhat, for example you
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might want to `static_assert` over the fact that `T` is an arithmetic
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type... or generalize the matcher to cover any type for which the user
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can provide a comparison function object.
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Note that while any matcher written using the old style can also be
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written using the new style, combining old style matchers should
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generally compile faster. Also note that you can combine old and new
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style matchers arbitrarily.
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> `MatcherBase` lives in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers.hpp`
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## Writing custom matchers (new style)
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> New style matchers were introduced in Catch2 3.0.1
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To create a new-style matcher, you have to create your own type that
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derives from `Catch::Matchers::MatcherGenericBase`. Your type has to
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also provide two methods, `bool match( ... ) const` and overridden
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`std::string describe() const`.
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Unlike with old-style matchers, there are no requirements on how
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the `match` member function takes its argument. This means that the
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argument can be taken by value or by mutating reference, but also that
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the matcher's `match` member function can be templated.
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This allows you to write more complex matcher, such as a matcher that
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can compare one range-like (something that responds to `begin` and
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`end`) object to another, like in the following example:
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```cpp
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#include <catch2/catch_test_macros.hpp>
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#include <catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_templated.hpp>
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// ...
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template<typename Range>
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struct EqualsRangeMatcher : Catch::Matchers::MatcherGenericBase {
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EqualsRangeMatcher(Range const& range):
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range{ range }
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{}
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template<typename OtherRange>
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bool match(OtherRange const& other) const {
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using std::begin; using std::end;
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return std::equal(begin(range), end(range), begin(other), end(other));
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}
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std::string describe() const override {
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return "Equals: " + Catch::rangeToString(range);
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}
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private:
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Range const& range;
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};
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template<typename Range>
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auto EqualsRange(const Range& range) -> EqualsRangeMatcher<Range> {
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return EqualsRangeMatcher<Range>{range};
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}
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TEST_CASE("Combining templated matchers", "[matchers][templated]") {
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std::array<int, 3> container{{ 1,2,3 }};
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std::array<int, 3> a{{ 1,2,3 }};
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std::vector<int> b{ 0,1,2 };
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std::list<int> c{ 4,5,6 };
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REQUIRE_THAT(container, EqualsRange(a) || EqualsRange(b) || EqualsRange(c));
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}
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```
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Do note that while you can rewrite any matcher from the old style to
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a new style matcher, combining new style matchers is more expensive
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in terms of compilation time. Also note that you can combine old style
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and new style matchers arbitrarily.
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> `MatcherGenericBase` lives in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_templated.hpp`
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---
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[Home](Readme.md#top)
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