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Feature: be_within matcher
Normal equality expectations do not work well for floating point values.
Consider this irb session:
> radius = 3
=> 3
> area_of_circle = radius * radius * Math::PI
=> 28.2743338823081
> area_of_circle == 28.2743338823081
=> false
Instead, you should use the be_within matcher to check that the value
is within a delta of your expected value:
```ruby
area_of_circle.should be_within(0.1).of(28.3)
```
Note that the difference between the actual and expected values must be
smaller than your delta; if it is equal, the matcher will fail.
Scenario: basic usage
Given a file named "be_within_matcher_spec.rb" with:
"""ruby
describe 27.5 do
it { should be_within(0.5).of(27.9) }
it { should be_within(0.5).of(28.0) }
it { should be_within(0.5).of(27.1) }
it { should be_within(0.5).of(27.0) }
it { should_not be_within(0.5).of(28.1) }
it { should_not be_within(0.5).of(26.9) }
# deliberate failures
it { should_not be_within(0.5).of(28) }
it { should_not be_within(0.5).of(27) }
it { should be_within(0.5).of(28.1) }
it { should be_within(0.5).of(26.9) }
end
"""
When I run `rspec be_within_matcher_spec.rb`
Then the output should contain all of these:
| 10 examples, 4 failures |
| expected 27.5 not to be within 0.5 of 28 |
| expected 27.5 not to be within 0.5 of 27 |
| expected 27.5 to be within 0.5 of 28.1 |
| expected 27.5 to be within 0.5 of 26.9 |
|