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@jeffh jeffh released this 02 May 08:15
· 909 commits to main since this release
v7.0.0

Nimble 7 is released! This is part of a series of major version releases to support a major change undergoing in Nimble - specifically how custom matchers are written. If you don't use custom matchers, you should see little visible changes and can safely skip to the bottom to see the "Other Changes". But if you do use custom matchers or are interested in the technical details, continue reading.

In short, Nimble is replacing Matcher protocol with Predicate type. The Predicate type attempts to address several common pitfalls when creating custom matchers and allow for several major features in the future:

  • Protocol extension matchers: expect(1).to.equal(1)
  • Add more composable matchers: expect([1, 2]).to(contain(1) && contain(2))
  • Increase flexibility of existing composable matchers: expect(1).to(equal(1) || beNil())
  • Allow wrapping existing matchers like: expect([1, 2]).to(contain(1).followed(by: 2))

But we're getting ahead of ourselves for a future that isn't here yet (or guaranteed). Let's focus back on Predicate.

The New Predicate Type

Nimble v7.0.0 introduces a new matcher API via the Predicate type (we used all the matcher names). For the purposes of discussion, matcher refers to the concept Nimble has for building expectations and Matcher refers to the (now) deprecated matcher API.

The main goal is to help make matcher writing less error-prone in several ways:

  • Support special nil handling typical for Nimble matchers.
  • Make error messaging explicit and less shared-state munging.
  • Be explicit about the trinary behavior matchers have instead of relying on bools.

Predicate aims to address these goals by changing the closure to be a pure function that returns a custom PredicateResult type. The PredicateResult type is simply two values:

PredicateResult(status: .fail, message: .expectedActualValueTo("equal <\(expected)>"))

status describes if the matcher succeeds or fails against the given value and message is the structured textual representation of that status. status is a trinary with the following values:

  • .matches - similar to returning "true". Indicates the expectation passes.
  • .doesNotMatch - similar to returning "false". Indicates the expectation failed, but negation would succeed (eg - toNot)
  • .fail - similar to returning "false". Indicates the expectation failed, even if negation was used.

This allows matchers to better indicate improper usages that would incorrectly pass if negated. If you need only the normal boolean-like return, use the alternative PredicateResult constructor:

PredicateResult(bool: true, message: ...)

The message argument supports a more structured error messaging that composable matchers can rely upon. It is currently limited, but is open for possible expansion if you file an issue.

Predicate replaces the following existing Nimble types:

  • Matcher - Use Predicate instead.
  • NonNilMatcherFunc - Use Predicate plus the .requireNonNil method
  • MatcherFunc - Use Predicate instead.

Since Predicate is not a protocol with an associated type, it makes function definitions much easier without requiring another type like NonNilMatcherFunc:

// OLD METHOD:
//   returning protocol
func equal<M: Matcher, T: Equatable where T == M.ValueType>(_ expected: T?) -> M { ... }
// OLD METHOD:
//   using NonNilMatcherFunc or MatcherFunc
func equal<T: Equatable>(_ expected: T?) -> NonNilMatcherFunc<T> { ... }

// NEW METHOD
func equal<T: Equatable>(_ expected: T?) -> Predicate<T> { ... }

Removing the protocol with associated type allows more composability among matchers. Previous these function types made composing them difficult:

// OLD METHOD:
func firstMatcher<M: Matcher, T: Equatable where T == M.ValueType>(_ expected: T?) -> M { ... }
func secondMatcher<T: Equatable>(_ expected: T?) -> NonNilMatcherFunc<T> { ... }
// can only specify every matcher in the generic
func usesOnlyTwoMatchers<M1: Matcher, M2: Matcher where M1.ValueType == M2.ValueType>(first: M1, second: M2) -> M

// NEW METHOD:
func firstMatcher<T: Equatable>(_ expected: T?) -> Predicate<T> { ... }
func secondMatcher<T: Equatable>(_ expected: T?) -> Predicate<T> { ... }
// can support many matchers
func usesManyMatchers<T>(matchers: [Predicate<T>]) -> Predicate<T>

Migrating to Predicate

If you're not using custom matchers, there isn't any additional work for you 🎉.

To migrate existing matchers, Nimble v7.0.0 currently provides temporary constructors:

/// These constructors are for convenience in adopting Nimble v7.0.0, but will be removed in Nimble v9.0.0
// If you already have a Matcher type you need to simply convert to Predicate:
Predicate.fromDeprecatedMatcher(myMatcher)
// Alternatively, you can use the extension:
myMatcher.predicate
// If you want to construct a Predicate using the same arguments as MatcherFunc
Predicate.fromDeprecatedClosure { actualExpression, failureMessage -> Bool in ... }
// If you want to construct a Predicate using the same arguments as NonNilMatcherFunc
Predicate.fromDeprecatedClosure { actualExpression, failureMessage -> Bool in
    ...
}.requireNonNil

These are useful to quickly adopt Nimble v7.0.0, but it's better in the long run to adopt the proper Predicate API to last beyond Nimble v9.0.0:

// The simple way to implment a NonNilMatcherFunc matcher in the new Predicate way:
public func equal<T: Equatable>(_ expectedValue: T?) -> Predicate<T> {
    // Alternatively, you can use Predicate.simple if you don't modify `msg`.
    // When a string is given to .define(), then
    // msg = .expectedActualValueTo("equal <\(expectedValue)>")
    // Predicate.define and Predicate.simple imply calling .requireNonNil.
    Predicate.define("equal <\(expectedValue)>") { actualExpression, msg -> PredicateResult in
        let actualValue = try actualExpression.evaluate()
        let matches = actualValue == expectedValue && expectedValue != nil
        if expectedValue == nil || actualValue == nil {
            if expectedValue == nil && actualValue != nil {
                return PredicateResult(
                    status: .fail,
                    message: msg.appendedBeNilHint()
                )
            }
            return PredicateResult(status: .fail, message: msg)
        }
        return PredicateResult(status: PredicateStatus(bool: matches), message: msg)
    }
}

// For a MatcherFunc:
public func beNil<T>() -> Predicate<T> {
    // Alternatively, you can use Predicate.defineNilable
    return Predicate.simpleNilable("be nil") { actualExpression -> PredicateStatus in
        let actualValue = try actualExpression.evaluate()
        return PredicateStatus(bool: actualValue == nil)
    }
}

To ease the migration process, Nimble will be removing Matcher after several major versions:

  • v7.x.x will introduce a new replacement to Matcher family of types via the Predicate type.
    • Matcher, NonNilMatcherFunc, MatcherFunc are marked as deprecated
    • Introduces temporary, migration-friendly constructors on Predicate to help suppress warnings for now.
  • v8.x.x will deprecate the temporary, migration friendly constructors.
  • v9.x.x will remove the old matcher types and temporary migration-friendly constructors.

New features that are released pre-v9.x.x will cater to the newer Predicate style.
Also, all built-in Nimble matchers currently use Predicate and Predicate also implemented the Matcher type until it's removal.

Other Changes

toSucceed Matcher

For quick, inline matchers, you can use toSucceed with the ToSucceedResult enum:

expect {
    return .succeeded
}.to(succeed())

expect {
    return .failed(reason: "expected a closure, got <nil> (use beNil() to match nils)")
}.to(succeed())

Changelog

  • (#390) Introduce new Matcher API (aka, Predicates)
  • (#417) Fix optional binding violation for SwiftLint (thanks @ysk-tngc)
  • (#410) Adds toSucceed matcher (thanks @Rivukis)
  • (#420) Fix invalid reference to CwlCatchBadInstructionPOSIX.swift for case-sensitive file systems (thanks @dagio)

As always, happy testing 😎!