all.equal.condition {unitizer} | R Documentation |
Compare Conditions
Description
Tests that issue warnings or 'stop' produce condition
objects.
The functions documented here are specialized versions of
all.equal
designed specifically to compare conditions and
condition lists produced during unitizer
test evaluations.
conditionList
objects are lists of conditions that come about
when test expressions emit multiple conditions (e.g. more than one warning).
Usage
## S4 method for signature 'conditionList,ANY'
all.equal(target, current, ...)
## S3 method for class 'equal.conditionList'
all(target, current, ...)
## S3 method for class 'equal.condition'
all(target, current, ...)
Arguments
target |
the list of conditions that we are matching against |
current |
the list of conditions we are checking |
... |
provided for compatibility with generic |
Details
condition
objects produced by tests have one additional
attributed “printed” which disambiguates whether a condition was the
result of the test expression, or the print
/ show
method used
to display it to screen.
For conditionList
objects, these methods only return TRUE if all
conditions are pairwise all.equal
.
Value
TRUE if the (lists of) conditions are equivalent, a character vector explaining why they are not otherwise
Examples
cond.1 <- simpleWarning('hello world')
cond.2 <- simpleError('hello world')
cond.3 <- simpleError('goodbye world')
all.equal(cond.1, cond.1)
all.equal(cond.1, cond.2)
all.equal(cond.2, cond.3)
## Normally you would never actually create a `conditionList` yourself; these
## are automatically generated by `unitizer` for review at the `unitizer`
## prompt
all.equal(
conditionList(.items=list(cond.1, cond.2)),
conditionList(.items=list(cond.1, cond.3))
)