Test Support
1 Using Check Forms
check-expect
check-random
check-satisfied
check-within
check-error
check-member-of
check-range
test
test-silence
test-execute
2 Running Tests and Inspecting Test Results
test-object
empty-test-object
current-test-object
initialize-test-object!
add-test!
add-failed-check!
add-signature-violation!
run-tests!
failed-check
fail-reason
unexpected-error
unexpected-error/  markup
unequal
not-within
incorrect-error
incorrect-error/  markup
expected-error
not-mem
not-range
satisfied-failed
unsatisfied-error
unsatisfied-error/  markup
violated-signature
signature-got
signature-violation
property-fail
property-error
3 Printing Test Results
render-value-parameter
display-test-results-parameter
display-test-results!
get-rewritten-error-message-parameter
get-rewritten-error-message
test-object->markup
8.15.0.10

Test Support🔗ℹ

    1 Using Check Forms

    2 Running Tests and Inspecting Test Results

    3 Printing Test Results

1 Using Check Forms🔗ℹ

 (require test-engine/racket-tests) package: htdp-lib

This module provides test forms for use in Racket programs, as well as parameters to configure the behavior of test reports.

Each check form may only occur at the top-level; results are collected and reported by the test function. Note that the check forms only register checks to be performed. The checks are actually run by the test function. Furthermore, syntax errors in check forms are intentionally delayed to run time so that students can write tests without necessarily writing complete function headers.

syntax

(check-expect expr expected-expr)

Checks whether the value of the expr expression is equal? to the value produced by the expected-expr.

It is an error for expr or expected-expr to produce a function value or an inexact number.

syntax

(check-random expr expected-expr)

Checks whether the value of the expr expression is equal? to the value produced by the expected-expr.

The form supplies the same random-number generator to both parts. If both parts request random numbers from the same interval in the same order, they receive the same random numbers.

Examples:
> (check-random (random 10) (random 10))
> (check-random
    (begin (random 100) (random 200))
    (begin (random 100) (random 200)))
> (test)

Both tests passed!

If the two parts call random for different intervals, they are likely to fail:

Examples:
> (check-random
    (begin (random 100) (random 200))
    (begin (random 200) (random 100)))
> (test)

Ran 1 test.                                                          

0 tests passed.                                                      

Check failures:                                                      

                     ┌─────┐              ┌────┐                     

        Actual value │ 149 │ differs from │ 74 │, the expected value.

                     └─────┘              └────┘                     

at line 2, column 0                                                  

It is an error for expr or expected-expr to produce a function value or an inexact number.

syntax

(check-satisfied expr property?)

Checks whether the value of the expr expression satisfies the property? predicate (which must evaluate to a function of one argument).

Examples:
> (check-satisfied 1 odd?)
> (check-satisfied 1 even?)
> (test)

Ran 2 tests.                                      

1 of the 2 tests failed.                          

Check failures:                                   

                     ┌───┐                        

        Actual value │ 1 │ does not satisfy even?.

                     └───┘                        

at line 3, column 0                               

Changed in version 1.1 of package htdp-lib: allow the above examples to run in BSL and BSL+

syntax

(check-within expr expected-expr delta-expr)

 
  delta-expr : number?
Checks whether the value of the test expression is structurally equal to the value produced by the expected expression; every number in the first expression must be within delta of the corresponding number in the second expression.

It is an error for expr or expected to produce a function value.

syntax

(check-error expr)

(check-error expr msg-expr)
 
  msg-expr : string?
Checks that evaluating expr signals an error, where the error message matches the string (if any).

syntax

(check-member-of expr expected-expr ...)

Checks whether the value of the expr expression is equal? to any of the values produced by the expected-exprs.

It is an error for expr or any of the expected-exprs to produce a function value or an inexact number.

syntax

(check-range expr min-expr max-expr)

 
  expr : number?
  min-expr : number?
  max-expr : number?
Checks whether value of expr is between the values of min-expr and max-expr inclusive.

syntax

(test)

Runs all of the tests specified by check forms in the current module and reports the results. When using the gui module, the results are provided in a separate window, otherwise the results are printed to the current output port.

parameter

(test-silence)  boolean?

(test-silence silence?)  void?
  silence? : any/c
A parameter that stores a boolean, defaults to #f, that can be used to suppress the printed summary from test.

parameter

(test-execute)  boolean?

(test-execute execute?)  void?
  execute? : any/c
A parameter that stores a boolean, defaults to #t, that can be used to suppress evaluation of test expressions.

2 Running Tests and Inspecting Test Results🔗ℹ

 (require test-engine/test-engine) package: htdp-lib

This module defines language-agnostic procedures for running test code to execute checks, and recording and inspecting their results.

A test is a piece of code run for testing, a check is a single assertion within that code: Typically the tests are first registered, then they are run, and then their results are inspected. Both tests and the results of failed checks are recorded in a data structure called a test object. There is always a current test object associated with the current namespace.

struct

(struct test-object (tests
    successful-tests
    failed-checks
    signature-violations))
  tests : (listof (-> boolean?))
  successful-tests : (listof (-> boolean?))
  failed-checks : (listof failed-check?)
  signature-violations : (listof signature-violation?)
The four components of a test-object are all in reverse order:

The first one is the list of tests (each represented by a thunk), the others are succeeded tests, failed checks and signature violations, respectively.

The thunks are expected to always run to completion. They shouöd return #t upon success, and #f upon failure.

procedure

(empty-test-object)  test-object?

Creates an empty test object.

procedure

(current-test-object)  test-object?

Returns the current test object.

procedure

(initialize-test-object!)  any

Initializes the test object. Note that this is not necessary before using current-test-object and the various other functions operating on it: These will automatically initialize as necessary. Use this function to reset the current test object.

procedure

(add-test! thunk)  any

  thunk : (-> boolean?)
Register a test, represented by a thunk. The thunk, when called, is expected to call add-failed-check! and add-signature-violation! as appropriate.

procedure

(add-failed-check! failed-check)  any

  failed-check : failed-check?
Record a test failure.

procedure

(add-signature-violation! violation)  any

  violation : signature-violation?
Record a signature violation.

procedure

(run-tests!)  test-object?

Run the tests, calling the thunks registered via add-test! in the order they were registered.

struct

(struct failed-check (reason srcloc?))

  reason : fail-reason?
  srcloc? : (or/c #f srcloc?)
This is a description of a failed check. The source location, if present, is from an expression that may have caused the failure, possibly an exception.

struct

(struct fail-reason (srcloc))

  srcloc : srcloc?
Common supertype of all objects describing a reason for a failed check. The srcloc is the source location of the check.

struct

(struct unexpected-error fail-reason (srcloc expected exn))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  expected : any/c
  exn : exn?
An error happened instead of regular termination.

struct

(struct unexpected-error/markup unexpected-error (srcloc
    expected
    exn
    error-markup))
  srcloc : srcloc?
  expected : any/c
  exn : exn?
  error-markup : markup?
An error happened instead of regular termination. This also contains markup describing the error.

struct

(struct unequal fail-reason (srcloc actual expected))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  actual : any/c
  expected : any/c
A value was supposed to be equal to another, but wasn’t. Generated by check-expect.

struct

(struct not-within fail-reason (srcloc actual expected range))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  actual : any/c
  expected : any/c
  range : real?
A value was supposed to be equal to another within a certain range, but wasn’t. Generated by check-within.

struct

(struct incorrect-error fail-reason (srcloc expected exn))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  expected : any/c
  exn : exn?
An exception was expected, but a different one occurred. Generated by check-error.

struct

(struct incorrect-error/markup incorrect-error (srcloc
    expected
    exn
    error-markup))
  srcloc : srcloc?
  expected : any/c
  exn : exn?
  error-markup : markup?
An exception was expected, but a different one occurred. Also includes markup describing the error. Generated by check-error.

struct

(struct expected-error fail-reason (srcloc message value))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  message : (or/c #f string?)
  value : any/c
An error was expected, but a value came out instead. Generated by check-error.

struct

(struct not-mem fail-reason (srcloc actual set))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  actual : any/c
  set : (listof any/c)
The value produced was not part an the expected set. Generated by check-member-of.

struct

(struct not-range fail-reason (srcloc actual min max))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  actual : real?
  min : real?
  max : real?
The value produced was not part an the expected range. Generated by check-range.

struct

(struct satisfied-failed fail-reason (srcloc actual name))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  actual : any/c
  name : string?
The value produced did not satisfy a predicate. The name field is the name of the predicate. Generated by check-satisfied.

struct

(struct unsatisfied-error fail-reason (srcloc name exn))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  name : string?
  exn : exn?
A value was supposed to satsify a predicate, but an error happened instead. The name field is the name of the predicate. Generated by check-satisfied.

struct

(struct unsatisfied-error/markup unsatisfied-error (srcloc
    name
    exn
    error-markup))
  srcloc : srcloc?
  name : string?
  exn : exn?
  error-markup : markup?
A value was supposed to satsify a predicate, but an error happened instead. The name field is the name of the predicate. Also includes markup describing the error. Generated by check-satisfied.

struct

(struct violated-signature fail-reason (srcloc
    obj
    signature
    blame-srcloc))
  srcloc : srcloc?
  obj : any/c
  signature : signature?
  blame-srcloc : (or/c #f srcloc?)
A signature was violated, and this was communicated via an exception. Note that signature violations should really be (and usually are) communicated via add-signature-violation!.

struct

(struct signature-got (value))

  value : any/c
The value that violated the signature.

struct

(struct signature-violation (obj
    signature
    message
    srcloc
    blame-srcloc))
  obj : any/c
  signature : signature?
  message : (or/c string? signature-got?)
  srcloc : (or/c #f srcloc?)
  blame-srcloc : (or/c #f srcloc?)
Signature signature was violated by object obj. The srcloc field is the location of the signature. The optional blame-srcloc points at the source code to blame for the violation.

struct

(struct property-fail fail-reason (srcloc result))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  result : check-result?
A counterexample for a property was found, described in the result field.

struct

(struct property-error fail-reason (srcloc exn))

  srcloc : srcloc?
  exn : exn?
A property check produced an unexpected exception.

3 Printing Test Results🔗ℹ

This module is responsible for output of test results: Where the output goes, and some aspects of the formatting can be customized via parameters.

 (require test-engine/test-markup) package: htdp-lib

parameter

(render-value-parameter)  (any/c . -> . string?)

(render-value-parameter render-value-proc)  void?
  render-value-proc : (any/c . -> . string?)
This parameter determines how test-object->markup renders a value for display in an error message in a language-specific way. The default is (lambda (v) (format "~V" v)).

parameter

(display-test-results-parameter)  (markup? . -> . any)

(display-test-results-parameter display-test-proc)  void?
  display-test-proc : (markup? . -> . any)
This parameter determines how to output the test results. The default prints to (current-output-port).

procedure

(display-test-results! markup)  any

  markup : markup?
This just calls the procedure bound to display-test-results-parameter.

parameter

(get-rewritten-error-message-parameter)

  (exn? . -> . string?)
(get-rewritten-error-message-parameter get-rewritten-error-message-proc)
  void?
  get-rewritten-error-message-proc : (exn? . -> . string?)
This parameter determines how to get an error message from an exception, possibly after reformulation and/or translation.

procedure

(get-rewritten-error-message exn)  string?

  exn : exn?
This just calls the procedure bound to get-rewritten-error-message-parameter.

procedure

(test-object->markup test-object)  markup?

  test-object : test-object?
This generates a test report as markup, using render-value-parameter and get-rewritten-error-message-parameter.