Module: Micronaut::Matchers

Included in:
Behaviour
Defined in:
lib/micronaut/matchers.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/be.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/eql.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/has.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/have.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/equal.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/match.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/change.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/include.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/satisfy.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/be_close.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/respond_to.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/raise_error.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/throw_symbol.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/method_missing.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/simple_matcher.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/operator_matcher.rb,
lib/micronaut/expectations/wrap_expectation.rb,
lib/micronaut/matchers/generated_descriptions.rb

Overview

We ship (courtesy of RSpec and Micronaut) with a number of useful Expression Matchers. An Expression Matcher is any object that responds to the following methods:

matches?(actual)
failure_message
negative_failure_message #optional
description #optional

See Micronaut::Expectations to learn how to use these as Expectation Matchers. See Micronaut::Mocks to learn how to use them as Mock Argument Constraints.

Predicates

In addition to those Expression Matchers that are defined explicitly, we will create custom Matchers on the fly for any arbitrary predicate, giving your specs a much more natural language feel.

A Ruby predicate is a method that ends with a “?” and returns true or false. Common examples are empty?, nil?, and instance_of?.

All you need to do is write should be_ followed by the predicate without the question mark, and we will figure it out from there. For example:

[].should be_empty => [].empty? #passes
[].should_not be_empty => [].empty? #fails

In addtion to prefixing the predicate matchers with “be_”, you can also use “be_a_” and “be_an_”, making your specs read much more naturally:

"a string".should be_an_instance_of(String) =>"a string".instance_of?(String) #passes

3.should be_a_kind_of(Fixnum) => 3.kind_of?(Numeric) #passes
3.should be_a_kind_of(Numeric) => 3.kind_of?(Numeric) #passes
3.should be_an_instance_of(Fixnum) => 3.instance_of?(Fixnum) #passes
3.should_not be_instance_of(Numeric) => 3.instance_of?(Numeric) #fails

We will also create custom matchers for predicates like has_key?. To use this feature, just state that the object should have_key(:key) and we will call has_key?(:key) on the target. For example:

{:a => "A"}.should have_key(:a) => {:a => "A"}.has_key?(:a) #passes
{:a => "A"}.should have_key(:b) => {:a => "A"}.has_key?(:b) #fails

You can use this feature to invoke any predicate that begins with “has_”, whether it is part of the Ruby libraries (like Hash#has_key?) or a method you wrote on your own class.

Custom Expectation Matchers

When you find that none of the stock Expectation Matchers provide a natural feeling expectation, you can very easily write your own.

For example, imagine that you are writing a game in which players can be in various zones on a virtual board. To specify that bob should be in zone 4, you could say:

bob.current_zone.should eql(Zone.new("4"))

But you might find it more expressive to say:

bob.should be_in_zone("4")

and/or

bob.should_not be_in_zone("3")

To do this, you would need to write a class like this:

class BeInZone
  def initialize(expected)
    @expected = expected
  end
  def matches?(target)
    @target = target
    @target.current_zone.eql?(Zone.new(@expected))
  end
  def failure_message
    "expected #{@target.inspect} to be in Zone #{@expected}"
  end
  def negative_failure_message
    "expected #{@target.inspect} not to be in Zone #{@expected}"
  end
end

… and a method like this:

def be_in_zone(expected)
  BeInZone.new(expected)
end

And then expose the method to your specs. This is normally done by including the method and the class in a module, which is then included in your spec:

module CustomGameMatchers
  class BeInZone
    ...
  end

  def be_in_zone(expected)
    ...
  end
end

describe "Player behaviour" do
  include CustomGameMatchers
  ...
end

Defined Under Namespace

Classes: Be, BeClose, Change, Have, Include, MatcherError, NegativeOperatorMatcher, OperatorMatcher, PositiveOperatorMatcher, RaiseError, RespondTo, Satisfy, SimpleMatcher, ThrowSymbol

Class Attribute Summary collapse

Class Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Summary collapse

Dynamic Method Handling

This class handles dynamic methods through the method_missing method

#method_missing(sym, *args, &block) ⇒ Object

:nodoc:



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers.rb', line 133

def method_missing(sym, *args, &block) # :nodoc:
  return Matchers::Be.new(sym, *args) if sym.to_s =~ /^be_/
  return has(sym, *args) if sym.to_s =~ /^have_/
  super
end

Class Attribute Details

.last_matcherObject

Returns the value of attribute last_matcher.



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/generated_descriptions.rb', line 4

def last_matcher
  @last_matcher
end

.last_shouldObject

Returns the value of attribute last_should.



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/generated_descriptions.rb', line 4

def last_should
  @last_should
end

Class Method Details

.clear_generated_descriptionObject



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/generated_descriptions.rb', line 6

def clear_generated_description
  self.last_matcher = nil
  self.last_should = nil
end

.generated_descriptionObject



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/generated_descriptions.rb', line 11

def generated_description
  return nil if last_should.nil?
  "#{last_should} #{last_description}"
end

Instance Method Details

#be(*args) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should be_true
should be_false
should be_nil
should be_arbitrary_predicate(*args)
should_not be_nil
should_not be_arbitrary_predicate(*args)

Given true, false, or nil, will pass if actual value is true, false or nil (respectively). Given no args means the caller should satisfy an if condition (to be or not to be).

Predicates are any Ruby method that ends in a “?” and returns true or false. Given be_ followed by arbitrary_predicate (without the “?”), we will match convert that into a query against the target object.

The arbitrary_predicate feature will handle any predicate prefixed with “be_an_” (e.g. be_an_instance_of), “be_a_” (e.g. be_a_kind_of) or “be_” (e.g. be_empty), letting you choose the prefix that best suits the predicate.

Examples

target.should be_true
target.should be_false
target.should be_nil
target.should_not be_nil

collection.should be_empty #passes if target.empty?
"this string".should be_an_intance_of(String)

target.should_not be_empty #passes unless target.empty?
target.should_not be_old_enough(16) #passes unless target.old_enough?(16)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/be.rb', line 199

def be(*args)
  Matchers::Be.new(*args)
end

#be_close(expected, delta) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should be_close(expected, delta)
should_not be_close(expected, delta)

Passes if actual == expected +/- delta

Example

result.should be_close(3.0, 0.5)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/be_close.rb', line 32

def be_close(expected, delta)
  BeClose.new(expected, delta)
end

#change(receiver = nil, message = nil, &block) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should change(receiver, message, &block)
should change(receiver, message, &block).by(value)
should change(receiver, message, &block).from(old).to(new)
should_not change(receiver, message, &block)

Allows you to specify that a Proc will cause some value to change.

Examples

lambda {
  team.add_player(player) 
}.should change(roster, :count)

lambda {
  team.add_player(player) 
}.should change(roster, :count).by(1)

lambda {
  team.add_player(player) 
}.should change(roster, :count).by_at_least(1)

lambda {
  team.add_player(player)
}.should change(roster, :count).by_at_most(1)    

string = "string"
lambda {
  string.reverse!
}.should change { string }.from("string").to("gnirts")

lambda {
  person.happy_birthday
}.should change(person, :birthday).from(32).to(33)

lambda {
  employee.develop_great_new_social_networking_app
}.should change(employee, :title).from("Mail Clerk").to("CEO")

Evaluates receiver.message or block before and after it evaluates the c object (generated by the lambdas in the examples above).

Then compares the values before and after the receiver.message and evaluates the difference compared to the expected difference.

WARNING

should_not change only supports the form with no subsequent calls to by, by_at_least, by_at_most, to or from.

blocks passed to should change and should_not change must use the {} form (do/end is not supported).



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/change.rb', line 144

def change(receiver=nil, message=nil, &block)
  Matchers::Change.new(receiver, message, &block)
end

#eql(expected) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should eql(expected)
should_not eql(expected)

Passes if actual and expected are of equal value, but not necessarily the same object.

See www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Object.html#M001057 for more information about equality in Ruby.

Examples

5.should eql(5)
5.should_not eql(3)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/eql.rb', line 16

def eql(expected)
  simple_matcher do |actual, matcher|
    matcher.failure_message          = "expected #{expected.inspect}, got #{actual.inspect} (using .eql?)", expected, actual
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{actual.inspect} not to equal #{expected.inspect} (using .eql?)", expected, actual
    matcher.description              = "eql #{expected.inspect}"
    actual.eql?(expected)
  end
end

#equal(expected) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should equal(expected)
should_not equal(expected)

Passes if given and expected are the same object (object identity).

See www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Object.html#M001057 for more information about equality in Ruby.

Examples

5.should equal(5) #Fixnums are equal
"5".should_not equal("5") #Strings that look the same are not the same object


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/equal.rb', line 16

def equal(expected)
  simple_matcher do |actual, matcher|
    matcher.failure_message          = "expected #{expected.inspect}, got #{actual.inspect} (using .equal?)", expected, actual
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{actual.inspect} not to equal #{expected.inspect} (using .equal?)", expected, actual
    matcher.description              = "equal #{expected.inspect}"
    actual.equal?(expected)
  end
end

#has(sym, *args) ⇒ Object

:nodoc:



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/has.rb', line 4

def has(sym, *args) # :nodoc:
  simple_matcher do |actual, matcher|
    matcher.failure_message          = "expected ##{predicate(sym)}(#{args[0].inspect}) to return true, got false"
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected ##{predicate(sym)}(#{args[0].inspect}) to return false, got true"
    matcher.description              = "have key #{args[0].inspect}"
    actual.__send__(predicate(sym), *args)
  end
end

#have(n) ⇒ Object Also known as: have_exactly

:call-seq:

should have(number).named_collection__or__sugar
should_not have(number).named_collection__or__sugar

Passes if receiver is a collection with the submitted number of items OR if the receiver OWNS a collection with the submitted number of items.

If the receiver OWNS the collection, you must use the name of the collection. So if a Team instance has a collection named #players, you must use that name to set the expectation.

If the receiver IS the collection, you can use any name you like for named_collection. We’d recommend using either “elements”, “members”, or “items” as these are all standard ways of describing the things IN a collection.

This also works for Strings, letting you set an expectation about its length

Examples

# Passes if team.players.size == 11
team.should have(11).players

# Passes if [1,2,3].length == 3
[1,2,3].should have(3).items #"items" is pure sugar

# Passes if "this string".length == 11
"this string".should have(11).characters #"characters" is pure sugar


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/have.rb', line 123

def have(n)
  Matchers::Have.new(n)
end

#have_at_least(n) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should have_at_least(number).items

Exactly like have() with >=.

Warning

should_not have_at_least is not supported



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/have.rb', line 136

def have_at_least(n)
  Matchers::Have.new(n, :at_least)
end

#have_at_most(n) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should have_at_most(number).items

Exactly like have() with <=.

Warning

should_not have_at_most is not supported



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/have.rb', line 148

def have_at_most(n)
  Matchers::Have.new(n, :at_most)
end

#include(*expected) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should include(expected)
should_not include(expected)

Passes if actual includes expected. This works for collections and Strings. You can also pass in multiple args and it will only pass if all args are found in collection.

Examples

[1,2,3].should include(3)
[1,2,3].should include(2,3) #would pass
[1,2,3].should include(2,3,4) #would fail
[1,2,3].should_not include(4)
"spread".should include("read")
"spread".should_not include("red")


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/include.rb', line 76

def include(*expected)
  Matchers::Include.new(*expected)
end

#match(regexp) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should match(regexp)
should_not match(regexp)

Given a Regexp, passes if actual =~ regexp

Examples

email.should match(/^([^\s]+)((?:[-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,})$/i)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/match.rb', line 13

def match(regexp)
  simple_matcher do |actual, matcher|
    matcher.failure_message          = "expected #{actual.inspect} to match #{regexp.inspect}", regexp, actual
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{actual.inspect} not to match #{regexp.inspect}", regexp, actual
    matcher.description              = "match #{regexp.inspect}"
    actual =~ regexp
  end
end

#raise_error(error = Exception, message = nil, &block) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should raise_error()
should raise_error(NamedError)
should raise_error(NamedError, String)
should raise_error(NamedError, Regexp)
should raise_error() { |error| ... }
should raise_error(NamedError) { |error| ... }
should raise_error(NamedError, String) { |error| ... }
should raise_error(NamedError, Regexp) { |error| ... }
should_not raise_error()
should_not raise_error(NamedError)
should_not raise_error(NamedError, String)
should_not raise_error(NamedError, Regexp)

With no args, matches if any error is raised. With a named error, matches only if that specific error is raised. With a named error and messsage specified as a String, matches only if both match. With a named error and messsage specified as a Regexp, matches only if both match. Pass an optional block to perform extra verifications on the exception matched

Examples

lambda { do_something_risky }.should raise_error
lambda { do_something_risky }.should raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError)
lambda { do_something_risky }.should raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError) { |error| error.data.should == 42 }
lambda { do_something_risky }.should raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError, "that was too risky")
lambda { do_something_risky }.should raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError, /oo ri/)

lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not raise_error
lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError)
lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError, "that was too risky")
lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not raise_error(PoorRiskDecisionError, /oo ri/)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/raise_error.rb', line 124

def raise_error(error=Exception, message=nil, &block)
  Matchers::RaiseError.new(error, message, &block)
end

#respond_to(*names) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should respond_to(*names)
should_not respond_to(*names)

Matches if the target object responds to all of the names provided. Names can be Strings or Symbols.

Examples



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/respond_to.rb', line 45

def respond_to(*names)
  Matchers::RespondTo.new(*names)
end

#satisfy(&block) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should satisfy {}
should_not satisfy {}

Passes if the submitted block returns true. Yields target to the block.

Generally speaking, this should be thought of as a last resort when you can’t find any other way to specify the behaviour you wish to specify.

If you do find yourself in such a situation, you could always write a custom matcher, which would likely make your specs more expressive.

Examples

5.should satisfy { |n|
  n > 3
}


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/satisfy.rb', line 45

def satisfy(&block)
  Matchers::Satisfy.new(&block)
end

#simple_matcher(description = nil, &match_block) ⇒ Object

simple_matcher makes it easy for you to create your own custom matchers in just a few lines of code when you don’t need all the power of a completely custom matcher object.

The description argument will appear as part of any failure message, and is also the source for auto-generated descriptions.

The match_block can have an arity of 1 or 2. The first block argument will be the given value. The second, if the block accepts it will be the matcher itself, giving you access to set custom failure messages in favor of the defaults.

The match_block should return a boolean: true indicates a match, which will pass if you use should and fail if you use should_not. false (or nil) indicates no match, which will do the reverse: fail if you use should and pass if you use should_not.

An error in the match_block will bubble up, resulting in a failure.

Example with default messages

def be_even
  simple_matcher("an even number") { |given| given % 2 == 0 }
end

describe 2 do
  it "should be even" do
    2.should be_even
  end
end

Given an odd number, this example would produce an error message stating: expected “an even number”, got 3.

Unfortunately, if you’re a fan of auto-generated descriptions, this will produce “should an even number.” Not the most desirable result. You can control that using custom messages:

Example with custom messages

def rhyme_with(expected)
  simple_matcher("rhyme with #{expected.inspect}") do |given, matcher|
    matcher.failure_message = "expected #{given.inspect} to rhyme with #{expected.inspect}"
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{given.inspect} not to rhyme with #{expected.inspect}"
    given.rhymes_with? expected
  end
end

# OR

def rhyme_with(expected)
  simple_matcher do |given, matcher|
    matcher.description = "rhyme with #{expected.inspect}"
    matcher.failure_message = "expected #{given.inspect} to rhyme with #{expected.inspect}"
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{given.inspect} not to rhyme with #{expected.inspect}"
    given.rhymes_with? expected
  end
end

describe "pecan" do
  it "should rhyme with 'be gone'" do
    nut = "pecan"
    nut.extend Rhymer
    nut.should rhyme_with("be gone")
  end
end

The resulting messages would be:

description:              rhyme with "be gone"
failure_message:          expected "pecan" to rhyme with "be gone"
negative failure_message: expected "pecan" not to rhyme with "be gone"

Wrapped Expectations

Because errors will bubble up, it is possible to wrap other expectations in a SimpleMatcher.

def be_even
  simple_matcher("an even number") { |given| (given % 2).should == 0 }
end

BE VERY CAREFUL when you do this. Only use wrapped expectations for matchers that will always be used in only the positive (should) or negative (should_not), but not both. The reason is that is you wrap a should and call the wrapper with should_not, the correct result (the should failing), will fail when you want it to pass.



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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/simple_matcher.rb', line 130

def simple_matcher(description=nil, &match_block)
  SimpleMatcher.new(description, &match_block)
end

#throw_symbol(sym = nil) ⇒ Object

:call-seq:

should throw_symbol()
should throw_symbol(:sym)
should throw_symbol(:sym, arg)
should_not throw_symbol()
should_not throw_symbol(:sym)
should_not throw_symbol(:sym, arg)

Given no argument, matches if a proc throws any Symbol.

Given a Symbol, matches if the given proc throws the specified Symbol.

Given a Symbol and an arg, matches if the given proc throws the specified Symbol with the specified arg.

Examples

lambda { do_something_risky }.should throw_symbol
lambda { do_something_risky }.should throw_symbol(:that_was_risky)
lambda { do_something_risky }.should throw_symbol(:that_was_risky, culprit)

lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not throw_symbol
lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not throw_symbol(:that_was_risky)
lambda { do_something_risky }.should_not throw_symbol(:that_was_risky, culprit)


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# File 'lib/micronaut/matchers/throw_symbol.rb', line 103

def throw_symbol(sym=nil)
  Matchers::ThrowSymbol.new(sym)
end

#wrap_expectation(matcher, &block) ⇒ Object

wraps an expectation in a block that will return true if the expectation passes and false if it fails (without bubbling up the failure).

This is intended to be used in the context of a simple matcher, and is especially useful for wrapping multiple expectations or one or more assertions from test/unit extensions when running with test/unit.

Examples

def eat_cheese(cheese)
  simple_matcher do |mouse, matcher|
    matcher.negative_failure_message = "expected #{mouse} not to eat cheese"
    wrap_expectation do |matcher|
      assert_eats_cheese(mouse)
    end
  end
end

describe Mouse do
  it "eats cheese" do
    Mouse.new.should eat_cheese
  end
end

The other benefit you get is that you can use the negative version of the matcher:

describe Cat do
  it "does not eat cheese" do
    Cat.new.should_not eat_cheese
  end
end

So in the event there is no assert_does_not_eat_cheese available, you’re all set!



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# File 'lib/micronaut/expectations/wrap_expectation.rb', line 41

def wrap_expectation(matcher, &block)
  begin
    block.call(matcher)
    return true
  rescue Exception => e
    matcher.failure_message = e.message
    return false
  end
end