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1ca8f43b01
Also adds `Predicate` helper function to create `PredicateMatcher`. Because of limitations in type inference it needs to be explicitly typed, like so `Predicate<std::string>([](std::string const& str) { ... })`. It also takes an optional second argument for description of the predicate. It is possible to infer the argument with sufficient TMP, see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/43560492/how-to-extract-lambdas-return-type-and-variadic-parameters-pack-back-from-gener/43561563#43561563 but I don't think that the magic is worth introducing ATM. Closes #1236
137 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
137 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
<a id="top"></a>
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# Matchers
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Matchers are an alternative way to do assertions which are easily extensible and composable.
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This makes them well suited to use with more complex types (such as collections) or your own custom types.
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Matchers were first popularised by the [Hamcrest](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamcrest) family of frameworks.
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## In use
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Matchers are introduced with the `REQUIRE_THAT` or `CHECK_THAT` macros, which take two arguments.
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The first argument is the thing (object or value) under test. The second part is a match _expression_,
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which consists of either a single matcher or one or more matchers combined using `&&`, `||` or `!` operators.
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For example, to assert that a string ends with a certain substring:
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```c++
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using Catch::Matchers::EndsWith; // or Catch::EndsWith
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std::string str = getStringFromSomewhere();
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REQUIRE_THAT( str, EndsWith( "as a service" ) );
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```
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The matcher objects can take multiple arguments, allowing more fine tuning.
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The built-in string matchers, for example, take a second argument specifying whether the comparison is
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case sensitive or not:
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```c++
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REQUIRE_THAT( str, EndsWith( "as a service", Catch::CaseSensitive::No ) );
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```
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And matchers can be combined:
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```c++
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REQUIRE_THAT( str,
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EndsWith( "as a service" ) ||
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(StartsWith( "Big data" ) && !Contains( "web scale" ) ) );
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```
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## Built in matchers
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Catch currently provides some matchers, they are in the `Catch::Matchers` and `Catch` namespaces.
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### String matchers
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The string matchers are `StartsWith`, `EndsWith`, `Contains`, `Equals` and `Matches`. The first four match a literal (sub)string against a result, while `Matches` takes and matches an ECMAScript regex. Do note that `Matches` matches the string as a whole, meaning that "abc" will not match against "abcd", but "abc.*" will.
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Each of the provided `std::string` matchers also takes an optional second argument, that decides case sensitivity (by-default, they are case sensitive).
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### Vector matchers
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The vector matchers are `Contains`, `VectorContains` and `Equals`. `VectorContains` looks for a single element in the matched vector, `Contains` looks for a set (vector) of elements inside the matched vector.
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### Floating point matchers
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The floating point matchers are `WithinULP` and `WithinAbs`. `WithinAbs` accepts floating point numbers that are within a certain margin of target. `WithinULP` performs an [ULP](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_in_the_last_place)-based comparison of two floating point numbers and accepts them if they are less than certain number of ULPs apart.
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Do note that ULP-based checks only make sense when both compared numbers are of the same type and `WithinULP` will use type of its argument as the target type. This means that `WithinULP(1.f, 1)` will expect to compare `float`s, but `WithinULP(1., 1)` will expect to compare `double`s.
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### Generic matchers
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Catch also aims to provide a set of generic matchers. Currently this set
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contains only a matcher that takes arbitrary callable predicate and applies
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it onto the provided object.
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Because of type inference limitations, the argument type of the predicate
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has to be provided explicitly. 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 second argument is an optional description of the predicate, and is
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used only during reporting of the result.
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## Custom matchers
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It's easy to provide your own matchers to extend Catch or just to work with your own types.
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You need to provide two things:
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1. A matcher class, derived from `Catch::MatcherBase<T>` - where `T` is the type being tested.
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The constructor takes and stores any arguments needed (e.g. something to compare against) and you must
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override two methods: `match()` and `describe()`.
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2. A simple builder function. This is what is actually called from the test code and allows overloading.
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Here's an example for asserting that an integer falls within a given range
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(note that it is all inline for the sake of keeping the example short):
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```c++
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// The matcher class
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class IntRange : public Catch::MatcherBase<int> {
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int m_begin, m_end;
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public:
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IntRange( int begin, int end ) : m_begin( begin ), m_end( end ) {}
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// Performs the test for this matcher
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virtual bool match( int const& i ) const override {
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return i >= m_begin && i <= m_end;
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}
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// Produces a string describing what this matcher does. It should
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// include any provided data (the begin/ end in this case) and
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// be written as if it were stating a fact (in the output it will be
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// preceded by the value under test).
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virtual std::string describe() const {
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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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// The builder function
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inline IntRange IsBetween( int begin, int end ) {
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return IntRange( begin, end );
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}
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// ...
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// Usage
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TEST_CASE("Integers are within a range")
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{
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CHECK_THAT( 3, IsBetween( 1, 10 ) );
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CHECK_THAT( 100, IsBetween( 1, 10 ) );
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}
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```
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Running this test gives the following in the console:
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```
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/**/TestFile.cpp:123: FAILED:
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CHECK_THAT( 100, IsBetween( 1, 10 ) )
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with expansion:
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100 is between 1 and 10
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```
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---
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[Home](Readme.md#top)
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