org.scalatest.Stepwise.scala Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2001-2013 Artima, Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.scalatest
import org.scalactic.Requirements._
import org.scalactic.exceptions.NullArgumentException
/**
* A Suite
class that takes zero to many Suite
s,
* which will be returned from its nestedSuites
method and
* executed in “stepwise” fashion by its runNestedSuites
method.
*
*
* For example, you can define a suite that always executes a list of
* nested suites like this:
*
*
*
* class StepsSuite extends Stepwise(
* new Step1Suite,
* new Step2Suite,
* new Step3Suite,
* new Step4Suite,
* new Step5Suite
* )
*
*
*
* When StepsSuite
is executed, regardless of whether a Distributor
* is passed, it will execute its
* nested suites sequentially in the passed order: Step1Suite
, Step2Suite
,
* Step3Suite
, Step4Suite
, and Step5Suite
.
*
*
*
* The difference between Stepwise
and Sequential
* is that although Stepwise
executes its own nested suites sequentially, it passes
* whatever distributor was passed to it to those nested suites. Thus the nested suites could run their own nested
* suites and tests in parallel if that distributor is defined. By contrast, Sequential
always
* passes None
for the distributor to the nested suites, so any and every test and nested suite
* contained within the nested suites passed to the Sequential
construtor will be executed sequentially.
*
*
* @param suitesToNest a sequence of Suite
s to nest.
*
* @throws NullArgumentException if suitesToNest
, or any suite
* it contains, is null
.
*
* @author Bill Venners
*/
// SKIP-DOTTY-START
class Stepwise(suitesToNest: Suite*) extends Suite with StepwiseNestedSuiteExecution { thisSuite =>
// SKIP-DOTTY-END
//DOTTY-ONLY open class Stepwise(suitesToNest: Suite*) extends Suite with StepwiseNestedSuiteExecution { thisSuite =>
requireNonNull(suitesToNest)
for (s <- suitesToNest) {
if (s == null)
throw new NullArgumentException("A passed suite was null")
}
/**
* Returns an immutable IndexedSeq
containing the suites passed to the constructor in
* the order they were passed.
*/
override val nestedSuites: collection.immutable.IndexedSeq[Suite] = Vector.empty ++ suitesToNest
/**
* Returns a user friendly string for this suite, composed of the
* simple name of the class (possibly simplified further by removing dollar signs if added by the Scala interpeter) and, if this suite
* contains nested suites, the result of invoking toString
on each
* of the nested suites, separated by commas and surrounded by parentheses.
*
* @return a user-friendly string for this suite
*/
override def toString: String = Suite.suiteToString(None, thisSuite)
}
/**
* Companion object to class Stepwise
that offers an apply
factory method
* for creating a Stepwise
instance.
*
*
* One use case for this object is to run multiple specification-style suites in the Scala interpreter, like this:
*
*
*
* scala> Stepwise(new MyFirstSuite, new MyNextSuite).execute()
*
*/
object Stepwise {
/**
* Factory method for creating a Stepwise
instance.
*/
def apply(suitesToNest: Suite*): Stepwise = new Stepwise(suitesToNest: _*)
}