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The two changes are `catch_matchers_templates` -> `catch_matchers_templated` and `catch_matchers_generic` -> `catch_matchers_predicate`. The former is mostly cosmetic, but the second was previously significantly misleading, and as the library is now to be consumed by including specific headers, this needed to be fixed.
387 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
387 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
<a id="top"></a>
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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::Contains;
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REQUIRE_THAT( getSomeString(),
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EndsWith("as a service") && Contains("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.h>
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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::Contains( "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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* `Contains(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 agains 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 Catch 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 3 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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* `WithinUlps(FloatingPoint target, uint64_t maxUlpDiff)`, and
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* `WithinRel(FloatingPoint target, FloatingPoint eps)`.
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> `WithinRel` matcher was introduced in Catch 2.10.0
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`WithinAbs` creates a matcher that accepts floating point numbers whose
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difference with `target` is less than the `margin`.
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`WithinULP` creates a matcher that accepts floating point numbers that
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are no more than `maxUlpDiff`
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[ULPs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_in_the_last_place)
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away from the `target` value. The short version of what this means
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is that there is no more than `maxUlpDiff - 1` representeable floating
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point numbers between the argument for matching and the `target` value.
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`WithinRel` creates a matcher that accepts floating point numbers that
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are _approximately equal_ with the `target` with tolerance of `eps.`
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Specifically, it matches if
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`|arg - target| <= eps * max(|arg|, |target|)` holds. If you do not
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specify `eps`, `std::numeric_limits<FloatingPoint>::epsilon * 100`
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is used as the default.
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In practice, you will often want to combine multiple of these matchers,
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together for an assertion, because all 3 options have edge cases where
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they behave differently than you would expect. As an example, under
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the `WithinRel` matcher, a `0.` only ever matches a `0.` (or `-0.`),
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regardless of the relative tolerance specified. Thus, if you want to
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handle numbers that are "close enough to 0 to be 0", you have to combine
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it with the `WithinAbs` matcher.
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For example, to check that our computation matches known good value
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within 0.1%, or is close enough (no different to 5 decimal places)
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to zero, we would write this assertion:
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```cpp
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REQUIRE_THAT( computation(input),
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Catch::Matchers::WithinRel(expected, 0.001)
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|| Catch::Matchers::WithinAbs(0, 0.000001) );
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```
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> floating point matchers live in `catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_floating.hpp`
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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 an 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 only one matcher for exceptions,
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`Message(std::string message)`. `Message` checks that the exception's
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message, as returned from `what` is exactly equal to `message`.
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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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```
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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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## 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.h>
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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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The new style of writing matchers has been introduced in Catch2 v3.
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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 overriden
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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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