Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Test.QuickCheck.Arbitrary.Generic
Description
Generic implementation of the arbitrary
method. Example usage:
data Foo = Foo { _fooX :: X , _fooY :: Y } deriving (Generic) instance Arbitrary Foo where arbitrary = genericArbitrary shrink = genericShrink
This instance can also be derived using DerivingVia language extension
data Foo = Foo { _fooX :: X , _fooY :: Y } deriving (Generic) deriving (Arbitrary) via GenericArbitrary Foo
The generated arbitrary
method is equivalent to
Synopsis
- newtype GenericArbitrary a = GenericArbitrary {
- unGenericArbitrary :: a
- class Arbitrary a where
- genericArbitrary :: (Generic a, GArbitrary ga, ga ~ Rep a) => Gen a
- genericShrink :: (Generic a, RecursivelyShrink (Rep a), GSubterms (Rep a) a) => a -> [a]
Documentation
newtype GenericArbitrary a Source #
Constructors
GenericArbitrary | |
Fields
|
Instances
Eq a => Eq (GenericArbitrary a) Source # | |
Defined in Test.QuickCheck.Arbitrary.Generic Methods (==) :: GenericArbitrary a -> GenericArbitrary a -> Bool # (/=) :: GenericArbitrary a -> GenericArbitrary a -> Bool # | |
Show a => Show (GenericArbitrary a) Source # | |
Defined in Test.QuickCheck.Arbitrary.Generic Methods showsPrec :: Int -> GenericArbitrary a -> ShowS # show :: GenericArbitrary a -> String # showList :: [GenericArbitrary a] -> ShowS # | |
(Generic a, GArbitrary (Rep a), RecursivelyShrink (Rep a), GSubterms (Rep a) a) => Arbitrary (GenericArbitrary a) Source # | |
Defined in Test.QuickCheck.Arbitrary.Generic Methods arbitrary :: Gen (GenericArbitrary a) # shrink :: GenericArbitrary a -> [GenericArbitrary a] # |
Random generation and shrinking of values.
QuickCheck provides Arbitrary
instances for most types in base
,
except those which incur extra dependencies.
For a wider range of Arbitrary
instances see the
quickcheck-instances
package.
Minimal complete definition
Methods
A generator for values of the given type.
It is worth spending time thinking about what sort of test data
you want - good generators are often the difference between
finding bugs and not finding them. You can use sample
,
label
and classify
to check the quality of your test data.
There is no generic arbitrary
implementation included because we don't
know how to make a high-quality one. If you want one, consider using the
testing-feat or
generic-random packages.
The QuickCheck manual goes into detail on how to write good generators. Make sure to look at it, especially if your type is recursive!
Produces a (possibly) empty list of all the possible immediate shrinks of the given value.
The default implementation returns the empty list, so will not try to
shrink the value. If your data type has no special invariants, you can
enable shrinking by defining shrink =
, but by customising
the behaviour of genericShrink
shrink
you can often get simpler counterexamples.
Most implementations of shrink
should try at least three things:
- Shrink a term to any of its immediate subterms.
You can use
subterms
to do this. - Recursively apply
shrink
to all immediate subterms. You can userecursivelyShrink
to do this. - Type-specific shrinkings such as replacing a constructor by a simpler constructor.
For example, suppose we have the following implementation of binary trees:
data Tree a = Nil | Branch a (Tree a) (Tree a)
We can then define shrink
as follows:
shrink Nil = [] shrink (Branch x l r) = -- shrink Branch to Nil [Nil] ++ -- shrink to subterms [l, r] ++ -- recursively shrink subterms [Branch x' l' r' | (x', l', r') <- shrink (x, l, r)]
There are a couple of subtleties here:
- QuickCheck tries the shrinking candidates in the order they
appear in the list, so we put more aggressive shrinking steps
(such as replacing the whole tree by
Nil
) before smaller ones (such as recursively shrinking the subtrees). - It is tempting to write the last line as
[Branch x' l' r' | x' <- shrink x, l' <- shrink l, r' <- shrink r]
but this is the wrong thing! It will force QuickCheck to shrinkx
,l
andr
in tandem, and shrinking will stop once one of the three is fully shrunk.
There is a fair bit of boilerplate in the code above.
We can avoid it with the help of some generic functions.
The function genericShrink
tries shrinking a term to all of its
subterms and, failing that, recursively shrinks the subterms.
Using it, we can define shrink
as:
shrink x = shrinkToNil x ++ genericShrink x where shrinkToNil Nil = [] shrinkToNil (Branch _ l r) = [Nil]
genericShrink
is a combination of subterms
, which shrinks
a term to any of its subterms, and recursivelyShrink
, which shrinks
all subterms of a term. These may be useful if you need a bit more
control over shrinking than genericShrink
gives you.
A final gotcha: we cannot define shrink
as simply
as this shrinks shrink
x = Nil:genericShrink
xNil
to Nil
, and shrinking will go into an
infinite loop.
If all this leaves you bewildered, you might try
to begin with,
after deriving shrink
= genericShrink
Generic
for your type. However, if your data type has any
special invariants, you will need to check that genericShrink
can't break those invariants.
Instances
genericShrink :: (Generic a, RecursivelyShrink (Rep a), GSubterms (Rep a) a) => a -> [a] #
Shrink a term to any of its immediate subterms, and also recursively shrink all subterms.