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NAMEType::Tiny::Manual::UsingWithTestMore - Type::Tiny for test suitesMANUALTest::TypeTinyThis is a module for testing that types you've defined accept and reject the values you think they should.should_pass($value, $type); should_fail($othervalue, $type); Easy. (But yeah, I always forget whether the type goes first or second!) There's also a function to test that subtype/supertype relationships are working okay. ok_subtype($type, @subtypes); Of course you can just check a type like this: ok( $type->check($value) ); But the advantage of "should_pass" is that if the "EXTENDED_TESTING" environment variable is set to true, "should_pass" will also perform a strict check on the value, which involves climbing up the type's inheritance tree (its parent, its parent's parent, etc) to make sure the value passes all their constraints. If a normal check and strict check differ, this is usually a problem in the inlining code somewhere. See Test::TypeTiny for more information. Type::Tiny as a Replacement for Test::DeepHere's one of the examples from the Test::Deep documentation:my $name_re = re('^(Mr|Mrs|Miss) \w+ \w+$'); cmp_deeply( $person, { Name => $name_re, Phone => re('^0d{6}$'), ChildNames => array_each($name_re) }, "person ok" ); It's pretty easy to rewrite this to use Types::Standard: my $name = StrMatch[ qr/^(Mr|Mrs|Miss) \w+ \w+$/ ]; should_pass( $person, Dict[ Name => $name, Phone => StrMatch[ qr/^0d{6}$/ ], ChildNames => ArrayRef[$name] ] ); There's nothing especially wrong with Test::Deep, but if you're already familiar with Type::Tiny's built-in types and you've maybe written your own type libraries too, it will save you having to switch between using two separate systems of checks. NEXT STEPSHere's your next step:
AUTHORToby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.COPYRIGHT AND LICENCEThis software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017-2021 by Toby Inkster.This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIESTHIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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