On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 12:35:49 -0400, Daniel Gibson <metalcae...@gmail.com> wrote:

Am 14.04.2011 17:47, schrieb Steven Schveighoffer:
On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 11:28:39 -0400, spir <denis.s...@gmail.com> wrote:

On 04/14/2011 04:03 PM, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
Sometimes, I worry that my unit tests or asserts aren't running.
Every once in
a while, I have to change one to fail to make sure that code is
compiling (this
is especially true when I'm doing version statements or templates).
It would
be nice if there was a -assertprint mode which showed asserts
actually running
(only for the module compiled with that switch, of course).

Man, I'm very pleased to read someone else advocating for optionally
verbose assertions.
This could use 2 arguments instead of a predicate:
     assert(expressions, value);
Example use:

[snip]

I don't think we can change assert syntax now.  What I was looking was
for something more like:

assert(x == y);

prints out

"asserting x == y: true"

for asserts that pass when you have the 'verbose assert' flag turned
on.  This should be easy to do in the compiler by just translating

assert(expr);

to something like:

auto result = evaluateAssert(expr);
print("asserting expr: ", result ? "true" : "false");
assert(result);

-Steve

Another possibility are named unittests and printing out "running test
'foobar' was successful".
One message for every assert is too verbose IMHO.

I'm thinking of the code examples that have asserts in them. I totally like the idea of code examples in ddoc being compiled as unit tests. This ensures your examples don't get out of date or are not invalid (as many of phobos' examples are). Nothing is worse when learning a language to encounter errors or unexpected results from the sanctioned examples. This means they have to look like unit tests, but also be useful for learning (see my above issue).

A compromise might be to be able to name unit tests, and then run a specific unit test by name on execution only. This allows you to ensure a specific unit test (and specific asserts in that unit test) are running without having to see all the asserts from the other unit tests, but also allows using asserts for general example code/testing.

This also could mean that you could simply directly compile a phobos module with -assertverbose -unittest and do:

./algorithm --run-unit-test std.algorithm.sort_example

to see all the asserts working for that example.

-Steve

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