HI Jacques, This looks very similar to the recently released testing-feat library: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/testing-feat-0.2
I get a build error on the latest platform: Test\GenCheck\Base\LabelledPartition.lhs:126:3: The equation(s) for `new' have two arguments, but its type `[a] -> Map k a' has only one In the instance declaration for `LabelledPartition (Map k) a' Regards, Jonas On 19 June 2012 17:04, Jacques Carette <care...@mcmaster.ca> wrote: > Test.GenCheck is a Haskell library for generalized proposition-based > testing. It simultaneously generalizes QuickCheck and SmallCheck. > > Its main novel features are: > > introduces a number of testing strategies and strategy combinators > introduces a variety of test execution methods > guarantees uniform sampling (at each rank) for the random strategy > guarantees both uniqueness and coverage of all structures for the exhaustive > strategy > introduces an extreme strategy for testing unbalanced structures > also introduces a uniform strategy which does uniform sampling along an > enumeration > allows different strategies to be mixed; for example one can exhaustively > test all binary trees up to a certain size, filled with random integers. > complete separation between properties, generators, testing strategies and > test execution methods > > The package is based on a lot of previous research in combinatorics > (combinatorial enumeration of structures and the theory of Species), as well > as a number of established concepts in testing (from a software engineering > perspective). In other words, further to the features already implemented in > this first release, the package contains an extensible, general framework > for generators, test case generation and management. It can also be very > easily generalized to cover many more combinatorial structures unavailable > as Haskell types. > > The package also provides interfaces for different levels of usage. In other > words, there is a 'simple' interface for dealing with straightforward > testing, a 'medium' interface for those who want to explore different > testing strategies, and an 'advanced' interface for access to the full power > of GenCheck. > > See http://hackage.haskell.org/package/gencheck for further details. > > In the source repository (https://github.com/JacquesCarette/GenCheck), the > file tutorial/reverse/TestReverseList.lhs shows the simplest kinds of tests > (standard and deep for structures, or base for unstructured types) and > reporting (checking, testing and full report) for the classical list reverse > function. The files in tutorial/list_zipper show what can be done with the > medium level interface (this tutorial is currently incomplete). The brave > user can read the source code of the package for the advanced usage -- but > we'll write a tutorial for this too, later. > > User beware: this is gencheck-0.1, there are still a few rough edges. We > plan to add a Template Haskell feature to this which should make deriving > enumerators automatic for version 0.2. > > Jacques and Gordon > > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell mailing list > Haskell@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell > _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell