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Equality assertion for scalatest and scalacheck which outputs a diff of two unequal inputs

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Equate

Equality assertion for scalatest and scalacheck which outputs a diff of two unequal inputs.

The purpose

When your scalatest suite fails you might see output like this:

[info]   TcpHeader(12345,54321,123456789,234567890,0,false,false,false,false,false,false,false,false,false,12,6354,List()) was not equal to TcpHeader(12345,5421,123456789,234567890,0,false,false,false,false,false,false,true,false,false,12,6354,List()) (TcpSpec.scala:8080)

If you want to find out where the two values differ, you have a choice:

  • You can spell your way through all the fields by hand.
  • You can pipe the two strings through e.g. wdiff and squint at the output of that.
  • You can string together diff <(tr ',' '\n' ob) <(tr ',' '\n' ex) or something like that, after copy-pasting the two values to two files named ob and ex, which takes a while.

Why though? The computer should just tell you. So I made it tell you. With Equate you get output like this:

[info] - some test case *** FAILED ***
[info]   Diff legend: '^' in both; 'o' observed only; 'e' expected only.
[info]
[info]   Observed (above) versus expected (below):
[info]
[info]     TcpHeader(12345,54321,123456789,234567890,0,false,false,fals
[info]     TcpHeader(12345,54321,123456789,234567890,0,false,false,fals
[info]     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
[info]
[info]     e,false,false,false,fals   e,false,false,12,6354,List())
[info]     e,false,false,false,    true,false,false,12,6354,List())
[info]     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ooooeee^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
[info]
[info]   good luck :) (TcpSpec.scala:8080)

This way, you can quickly spot that the difference is in the third boolean field from the right.

How to use equate

import equate.scalatest.Equate.equate
import myapp.yakshaving.{Yak, shave}
import org.scalatest.{Matchers, WordSpec}

class YakShavingSpec extends WordSpec with Matchers {
  "yak razors" should {
    "shave yaks" in {
      val observed = shave(Yak(hairlength = 5))
      val expected = Yak(hairlength = 1)
      observed should equate (expected)
    }
  }
}

Use equate the same way you would use equal. If you're like me in that you use shouldBe expected and not should equal (expected), use should equate(_) the same way you would use shouldBe _.

Instead of importing equate you can mix in Equate, like so:

import equate.scalatest.Equate
import myapp.yakshaving.{Yak, shave}
import org.scalatest.{Matchers, WordSpec}

class YakShavingSpec extends WordSpec with Matchers with Equate {
  "yak razors" should {
    "shave yaks" in {
      shave(Yak(hairlength=5)) should equate (Yak(hairlength=1))
    }
  }
}

There's also support for scalacheck:

import equate.scalacheck.Equate.?==
import myapp.yakshaving.{Yak, shave}
import myapp.testhelpers.arbitraryYak
import org.scalacheck.Properties
import org.scalacheck.Prop.forAll

class YakProperties extends Properties("Yak") {
  property("yak shaving is idempotent (but that never stopped anyone)") =
    forAll { (yak: Yak) => shave(shave(yak)) ?== shave(yak) }
}

Use ?== and ==? the same way you would use ?= and =?. You only need to import ?==: this is an implicit conversion to a wrapper that supplies both ?== and ==? (similar to Prop.AnyOperators).

What exactly does equate do?

equate asserts that that observed == expected, i.e. that its two inputs are equal. Otherwise, a diff between observed.toString and expected.toString is computed and emitted.

It uses the Myers' linear space bidirectional search algorithm, the same algorithm as git uses (by default), modulo perhaps a few tweaks of my own. Fewer differences means faster execution. The diffs are calculated character by character, which gets slow if you're comparing several kilobytes of random or otherwise highly mismatching data.

This algorithm seems like a good choice: I've had Wagner-Fischer take too long on mere kilobytes of data, and the simpler quadratic space Myers algorithm exhaust my JVM's memory. The fancy Myers algorithm takes ~25 microseconds on the TcpHeader example, a fairly typical workload, and ~200ms comparing two screenfuls (159*37 characters) of maximally different data.

Definition of "equate"

Transitive verb: to treat, represent, or regard as equal, equivalent, or comparable.

Intransitive verb: to correspond as equal.

Copyright

Equate is copyright 2021 Jonas Kölker, released under the Apache 2.0 license, see LICENSE.

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