fun <E, T : Sequence<E>> Expect<T>.asIterable(): Expect<Iterable<E>>
(source)
Turns Expect<Sequence<E>>
into Expect<Iterable<E>>
.
The transformation as such is not reflected in reporting.
Use feature(Sequence::asIterable)
if you want to show the transformation in reporting.
expect(sequenceOf(1, 2, 3))
.asIterable() // subject is now of type Iterable<Int>
.toContain
.inOrder // order specifier
.only
.values(1, 2, 3)
fails {
expect(sequenceOf(1, 2, 3))
.asIterable() // subject is now of type Iterable<Int>
.toContain(4)
}
Return
The newly created Expect for the transformed subject.
fun <E, T : Sequence<E>> Expect<T>.asIterable(assertionCreator: Expect<Iterable<E>>.() -> Unit): Expect<T>
(source)
Expects that the subject of this
expectation holds all assertions the given assertionCreator creates for
the subject as Iterable.
The transformation as such is not reflected in reporting.
Use feature(Sequence::asIterable, assertionCreator)
if you want to show the transformation in reporting.
expect(sequenceOf(1, 2, 3))
.asIterable { // subject within this block is of type Iterable<Int>
toContain(1)
toContain(2)
toContain(3)
} // subject here is back to type Sequence<Int>
fails {
expect(sequenceOf(1, 2, 3))
.asIterable { // subject within this block is of type Iterable<Int>
toContain(4)
} // subject here is back to type Sequence<Int>
}
Return
an Expect for the subject of this
expectation.