Package

zio.test

poly

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package poly

Visibility
  1. Public
  2. All

Type Members

  1. trait GenFractionalPoly extends GenNumericPoly

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    GenFractionalPoly provides evidence that instances of Gen[T] and Fractional[T] exist for some concrete but unknown type T.

  2. trait GenIntegralPoly extends GenNumericPoly

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    GenIntegralPoly provides evidence that instances of Gen[T] and Integral[T] exist for some concrete but unknown type T.

  3. trait GenNumericPoly extends GenOrderingPoly

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    GenNumericPoly provides evidence that instances of Gen[T] and Numeric[T] exist for some concrete but unknown type T.

  4. trait GenOrderingPoly extends GenPoly

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    GenOrderingPoly provides evidence that instances of Gen[T] and Ordering[T] exist for some concrete but unknown type T.

  5. trait GenPoly extends AnyRef

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    GenPoly provides evidence that an instance of Gen[T] exists for some concrete but unknown type T.

    GenPoly provides evidence that an instance of Gen[T] exists for some concrete but unknown type T. Subtypes of GenPoly provide additional constraints on the type of T, such as that an instance of Ordering[T] or Numeric[T] exists. Users can also extend GenPoly to add their own constraints.

    This allows construction of polymorphic generators where the the type is known to satisfy certain constraints even though the type itself is unknown.

    For instance, consider the following generalized algebraic data type:

    sealed trait Expr[+A] extends Product with Serializable
    
    final case class Value[+A](value: A) extends Expr[A]
    final case class Mapping[A, +B](expr: Expr[A], f: A => B) extends Expr[B]

    We would like to test that for any expression we can fuse two mappings. We want to create instances of Expr that reflect the full range of values that an Expr can take, including multiple layers of nested mappings and mappings between different types.

    Since we do not need any constraints on the generated types we can simply use GenPoly. GenPoly includes a convenient generator in its companion object, genPoly, that generates instances of 40 different types including primitive types and various collections.

    Using it we can define polymorphic generators for expressions:

    def genValue(t: GenPoly): Gen[Random with Sized, Expr[t.T]] =
      t.genT.map(Value(_))
    
    def genMapping(t: GenPoly): Gen[Random with Sized, Expr[t.T]] =
      Gen.suspend {
        GenPoly.genPoly.flatMap { t0 =>
          genExpr(t0).flatMap { expr =>
            val genFunction: Gen[Random with Sized, t0.T => t.T] = Gen.function(t.genT)
            val genExpr1: Gen[Random with Sized, Expr[t.T]]      = genFunction.map(f => Mapping(expr, f))
            genExpr1
          }
        }
      }
    
    def genExpr(t: GenPoly): Gen[Random with Sized, Expr[t.T]] =
      Gen.oneOf(genMapping(t), genValue(t))

    Finally, we can test our property:

    testM("map fusion") {
      check(GenPoly.genPoly.flatMap(genExpr(_))) { expr =>
        assert(eval(fuse(expr)))(equalTo(eval(expr)))
      }
    }

    This will generate expressions with multiple levels of nesting and polymorphic mappings between different types, making sure that the types line up for each mapping. This provides a higher level of confidence in properties than testing with a monomorphic value.

    Inspired by Erik Osheim's presentation "Galaxy Brain: type-dependence and state-dependence in property-based testing" http://plastic-idolatry.com/erik/oslo2019.pdf.

Value Members

  1. object GenFractionalPoly

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  2. object GenIntegralPoly

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  3. object GenNumericPoly

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  4. object GenOrderingPoly

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  5. object GenPoly

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