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diff --git a/unittest/Catch/docs/assertions.md b/unittest/Catch/docs/assertions.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..82bb96a --- /dev/null +++ b/unittest/Catch/docs/assertions.md @@ -0,0 +1,82 @@ +# Assertion Macros + +Most test frameworks have a large collection of assertion macros to capture all possible conditional forms (```_EQUALS```, ```_NOTEQUALS```, ```_GREATER_THAN``` etc). + +Catch is different. Because it decomposes natural C-style conditional expressions most of these forms are reduced to one or two that you will use all the time. That said there are a rich set of auxilliary macros as well. We'll describe all of these here. + +Most of these macros come in two forms: + +## Natural Expressions + +The ```REQUIRE``` family of macros tests an expression and aborts the test case if it fails. +The ```CHECK``` family are equivalent but execution continues in the same test case even if the assertion fails. This is useful if you have a series of essentially orthogonal assertions and it is useful to see all the results rather than stopping at the first failure. + +* **REQUIRE(** _expression_ **)** and +* **CHECK(** _expression_ **)** + +Evaluates the expression and records the result. If an exception is thrown it is caught, reported, and counted as a failure. These are the macros you will use most of the time + +Examples: +``` +CHECK( str == "string value" ); +CHECK( thisReturnsTrue() ); +REQUIRE( i == 42 ); +``` + +* **REQUIRE_FALSE(** _expression_ **)** and +* **CHECK_FALSE(** _expression_ **)** + +Evaluates the expression and records the _logical NOT_ of the result. If an exception is thrown it is caught, reported, and counted as a failure. +(these forms exist as a workaround for the fact that ! prefixed expressions cannot be decomposed). + +Example: +``` +REQUIRE_FALSE( thisReturnsFalse() ); +``` + +### Floating point comparisons + +When comparing floating point numbers - especially if at least one of them has been computed - great care must be taken to allow for rounding errors and inexact representations. + +Catch provides a way to perform tolerant comparisons of floating point values through use of a wrapper class called ```Approx```. ```Approx``` can be used on either side of a comparison expression. It overloads the comparisons operators to take a tolerance into account. Here's a simple example: + +``` +REQUIRE( performComputation() == Approx( 2.1 ) ); +``` + +By default a small epsilon value is used that covers many simple cases of rounding errors. When this is insufficent the epsilon value (the amount within which a difference either way is ignored) can be specified by calling the ```epsilon()``` method on the ```Approx``` instance. e.g.: + +``` +REQUIRE( 22/7 == Approx( 3.141 ).epsilon( 0.01 ) ); +``` + +When dealing with very large or very small numbers it can be useful to specify a scale, which can be achieved by calling the ```scale()``` method on the ```Approx``` instance. + +## Exceptions + +* **REQUIRE_THROWS(** _expression_ **)** and +* **CHECK_THROWS(** _expression_ **)** + +Expects that an exception (of any type) is be thrown during evaluation of the expression. + +* **REQUIRE_THROWS_AS(** _expression_, _exception type_ **)** and +* **CHECK_THROWS_AS(** _expression_, _exception type_ **)** + +Expects that an exception of the _specified type_ is thrown during evaluation of the expression. + +* **REQUIRE_NOTHROW(** _expression_ **)** and +* **CHECK_NOTHROW(** _expression_ **)** + +Expects that no exception is thrown during evaluation of the expression. + +## Matcher expressions + +To support Matchers a slightly different form is used. Matchers will be more fully documented elsewhere. *Note that Matchers are still at early stage development and are subject to change.* + +* **REQUIRE_THAT(** _lhs_, _matcher call_ **)** and +* **CHECK_THAT(** _lhs_, _matcher call_ **)** + + +--- + +[Home](Readme.md)
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