1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145
|
#============================================================= -*-perl-*-
#
# t/class/vars.t
#
# Test the Badger::Class::Vars module.
#
# Written by Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org>
#
# This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
#========================================================================
use lib qw( t/class/lib ../t/class/lib ./lib ../lib ../../lib );
use Badger::Test
tests => 31,
debug => 'Badger::Class::Vars',
args => \@ARGV;
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars1 uses Badger::Class::Vars directly and defines vars using
# a single string:
# use Badger::Class::Vars '$FOO @BAR %BAZ';
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars1;
is( $My::Vars1::FOO, 'ten', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars1' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars1::BAR), '10, 20, 30', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars1' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars1::BAZ), 'x, y', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars1' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars2 uses Badger::Class::Vars directly and defines vars using
# a list of named params:
# use Badger::Class::Vars
# '$FOO' => 'eleven',
# '@BAR' => (11, 21, 31),
# '%BAZ' => (a => 101, b => 202);
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars2;
is( $My::Vars2::FOO, 'eleven', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars2' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars2::BAR), '11, 21, 31', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars2' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars2::BAZ), 'a, b', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars2' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars3 is like My::Vars2 but uses a hash ref:
# use Badger::Class::Vars {
# '$FOO' => 'twelve',
# '@BAR' => [12, 22, 32],
# '%BAZ' => {c => 310, d => 420},
# };
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars3;
is( $My::Vars3::FOO, 'twelve', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars3' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars3::BAR), '12, 22, 32', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars3' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars3::BAZ), 'c, d', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars3' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars4 defines vars using a list ref:
# use Badger::Class::Vars ['$FOO', '@BAR', '%BAZ'];
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars4;
is( $My::Vars4::FOO, 'thirteen', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars4' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars4::BAR), '13, 23, 33', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars4' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars4::BAZ), 'e, f', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars4' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars5 defines vars using Badger::Class
# use Badger::Class
# vars => '$FOO @BAR %BAZ';
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars5;
is( $My::Vars5::FOO, 'fourteen', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars5' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars5::BAR), '14, 24, 34', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars5' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars5::BAZ), 'g, h', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars5' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars6 defines vars using Badger::Class and a hash ref
# use Badger::Class
# vars => {
# '$FOO' => 'fifteen',
# '@BAR' => [15, 25, 35],
# '%BAZ' => {i => 310, j => 420},
# };
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars6;
is( $My::Vars6::FOO, 'fifteen', '$FOO is defined in My::Vars6' );
is( join(', ', @My::Vars6::BAR), '15, 25, 35', '@BAR is defined in My::Vars6' );
is( join(', ', sort keys %My::Vars6::BAZ), 'i, j', '%BAZ is defined in My::Vars6' );
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# My::Vars7 defines vars using Badger::Class and a hash ref which tests
# all the various variable types.
# use Badger::Class
# vars => {
# X => 1,
# Y => [2, 3],
# Z => { a => 99 },
# HAI => sub { 'Hello ' . (shift || 'World') },
# '$FOO' => 25,
# '$BAR' => [11, 21, 31],
# '$BAZ' => { wam => 'bam' },
# '$BAI' => sub { 'Goodbye ' . (shift || 'World') },
# '@WIZ' => [100, 200, 300],
# '@WAZ' => 99,
# '%WOZ' => { ping => 'pong' },
# };
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
use My::Vars7;
is( $My::Vars7::X, 1, 'vars X is 1' );
is( join(',', @$My::Vars7::Y), '2,3', 'vars Y is [2,3]' );
is( $My::Vars7::Z->{ a }, 99, 'vars Z is { a => 99 }' );
is( $My::Vars7::HAI->(), 'Hello World', 'vars HAI is sub' );
is( $My::Vars7::HAI->('Badger'), 'Hello Badger', 'vars HAI is sub with arg' );
is( $My::Vars7::FOO, 25, 'vars $FOO is 25' );
is( join(',', @$My::Vars7::BAR), '11,21,31', 'vars $BAR is [11,21,31]' );
is( $My::Vars7::BAZ->{ wam }, 'bam', 'vars $BAZ is { wam => "bam" }' );
is( $My::Vars7::BAI->(), 'Goodbye World', 'vars BAI is sub' );
is( $My::Vars7::BAI->('Badger'), 'Goodbye Badger', 'vars BAI is sub with arg' );
is( join(',', @My::Vars7::WIZ), '100,200,300', 'vars @WIZ is (100, 200, 300)' );
is( join(',', @My::Vars7::WAZ), '99', 'vars @WAZ is (99)' );
is( join(',', map { "$_ => $My::Vars7::WOZ{$_}" } keys %My::Vars7::WOZ), 'ping => pong', 'vars %WOZ is (ping => "pong")' );
|