| Copyright | (c) Colin Runciman et al. |
|---|---|
| License | BSD3 |
| Maintainer | Roman Cheplyaka <roma@ro-che.info> |
| Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
| Language | Haskell98 |
Test.SmallCheck.Series
Contents
Description
You need this module if you want to generate test values of your own types.
You'll typically need the following extensions:
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}SmallCheck itself defines data generators for all the data types used by the Prelude.
In order to generate values and functions of your own types, you need
to make them instances of Serial (for values) and CoSerial (for
functions). There are two main ways to do so: using Generics or writing
the instances by hand.
Synopsis
- cons0 :: a -> Series m a
- cons1 :: Serial m a => (a -> b) -> Series m b
- cons2 :: (Serial m a, Serial m b) => (a -> b -> c) -> Series m c
- cons3 :: (Serial m a, Serial m b, Serial m c) => (a -> b -> c -> d) -> Series m d
- cons4 :: (Serial m a, Serial m b, Serial m c, Serial m d) => (a -> b -> c -> d -> e) -> Series m e
- newtypeCons :: Serial m a => (a -> b) -> Series m b
- alts0 :: Series m a -> Series m a
- alts1 :: CoSerial m a => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b)
- alts2 :: (CoSerial m a, CoSerial m b) => Series m c -> Series m (a -> b -> c)
- alts3 :: (CoSerial m a, CoSerial m b, CoSerial m c) => Series m d -> Series m (a -> b -> c -> d)
- alts4 :: (CoSerial m a, CoSerial m b, CoSerial m c, CoSerial m d) => Series m e -> Series m (a -> b -> c -> d -> e)
- newtypeAlts :: CoSerial m a => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b)
- type Depth = Int
- data Series m a
- class Monad m => Serial m a where
- class Monad m => CoSerial m a where
- genericSeries :: (Monad m, Generic a, GSerial m (Rep a)) => Series m a
- genericCoseries :: (Monad m, Generic a, GCoSerial m (Rep a)) => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b)
- newtype Positive a = Positive {
- getPositive :: a
- newtype NonNegative a = NonNegative {
- getNonNegative :: a
- newtype NonEmpty a = NonEmpty {
- getNonEmpty :: [a]
- (\/) :: Monad m => Series m a -> Series m a -> Series m a
- (><) :: Monad m => Series m a -> Series m b -> Series m (a, b)
- (<~>) :: Monad m => Series m (a -> b) -> Series m a -> Series m b
- (>>-) :: MonadLogic m => m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
- localDepth :: (Depth -> Depth) -> Series m a -> Series m a
- decDepth :: Series m a -> Series m a
- getDepth :: Series m Depth
- generate :: (Depth -> [a]) -> Series m a
- limit :: forall m a. Monad m => Int -> Series m a -> Series m a
- listSeries :: Serial Identity a => Depth -> [a]
- list :: Depth -> Series Identity a -> [a]
- listM :: Monad m => Depth -> Series m a -> m [a]
- fixDepth :: Series m a -> Series m (Series m a)
- decDepthChecked :: Series m a -> Series m a -> Series m a
- constM :: Monad m => m b -> m (a -> b)
Generic instances
The easiest way to create the necessary instances is to use GHC generics (available starting with GHC 7.2.1).
Here's a complete example:
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-}
import Test.SmallCheck.Series
import GHC.Generics
data Tree a = Null | Fork (Tree a) a (Tree a)
deriving Generic
instance Serial m a => Serial m (Tree a)Here we enable the DeriveGeneric extension which allows to derive Generic
instance for our data type. Then we declare that Tree a is an instance of
Serial, but do not provide any definitions. This causes GHC to use the
default definitions that use the Generic instance.
One minor limitation of generic instances is that there's currently no way to distinguish newtypes and datatypes. Thus, newtype constructors will also count as one level of depth.
Data Generators
Writing Serial instances for application-specific types is
straightforward. You need to define a series generator, typically using
consN family of generic combinators where N is constructor arity.
For example:
data Tree a = Null | Fork (Tree a) a (Tree a) instance Serial m a => Serial m (Tree a) where series = cons0 Null \/ cons3 Fork
For newtypes use newtypeCons instead of cons1.
The difference is that cons1 is counts as one level of depth, while
newtypeCons doesn't affect the depth.
newtype Light a = Light a instance Serial m a => Serial m (Light a) where series = newtypeCons Light
For data types with more than 4 fields define consN as
consN f = decDepth $
f <$> series
<~> series
<~> series
<~> ... {- series repeated N times in total -}What does consN do, exactly?
consN has type
(Serial t_1, ..., Serial t_N) => (t_1 -> ... -> t_N -> t) -> Series t.
consN f is a series which, for a given depth d > 0, produces values of the
form
f x_1 ... x_N
where x_i ranges over all values of type t_i of depth up to d-1
(as defined by the series functions for t_i).
consN functions also ensure that x_i are enumerated in the
breadth-first order. Thus, combinations of smaller depth come first
(assuming the same is true for t_i).
If d <= 0, no values are produced.
cons4 :: (Serial m a, Serial m b, Serial m c, Serial m d) => (a -> b -> c -> d -> e) -> Series m e Source #
Function Generators
To generate functions of an application-specific argument type,
make the type an instance of CoSerial.
Again there is a standard pattern, this time using the altsN
combinators where again N is constructor arity. Here are Tree and
Light instances:
instance CoSerial m a => CoSerial m (Tree a) where
coseries rs =
alts0 rs >>- \z ->
alts3 rs >>- \f ->
return $ \t ->
case t of
Null -> z
Fork t1 x t2 -> f t1 x t2instance CoSerial m a => CoSerial m (Light a) where
coseries rs =
newtypeAlts rs >>- \f ->
return $ \l ->
case l of
Light x -> f xFor data types with more than 4 fields define altsN as
altsN rs = do
rs <- fixDepth rs
decDepthChecked
(constM $ constM $ ... $ constM rs)
(coseries $ coseries $ ... $ coseries rs)
{- constM and coseries are repeated N times each -}What does altsN do, exactly?
altsN has type
(Serial t_1, ..., Serial t_N) => Series t -> Series (t_1 -> ... -> t_N -> t).
altsN s is a series which, for a given depth d, produces functions of
type
t_1 -> ... -> t_N -> t
If d <= 0, these are constant functions, one for each value produced
by s.
If d > 0, these functions inspect each of their arguments up to the depth
d-1 (as defined by the coseries functions for the corresponding
types) and return values produced by s. The depth to which the
values are enumerated does not depend on the depth of inspection.
alts3 :: (CoSerial m a, CoSerial m b, CoSerial m c) => Series m d -> Series m (a -> b -> c -> d) Source #
alts4 :: (CoSerial m a, CoSerial m b, CoSerial m c, CoSerial m d) => Series m e -> Series m (a -> b -> c -> d -> e) Source #
newtypeAlts :: CoSerial m a => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b) Source #
Same as alts1, but preserves the depth.
Basic definitions
Maximum depth of generated test values.
For data values, it is the depth of nested constructor applications.
For functional values, it is both the depth of nested case analysis and the depth of results.
Series is a MonadLogic action that enumerates values of a certain
type, up to some depth.
The depth bound is tracked in the SC monad and can be extracted using
getDepth and changed using localDepth.
To manipulate series at the lowest level you can use its Monad,
MonadPlus and MonadLogic instances. This module provides some
higher-level combinators which simplify creating series.
A proper Series should be monotonic with respect to the depth — i.e.
localDepth (+1) s should emit all the values that s emits (and
possibly some more).
It is also desirable that values of smaller depth come before the values of greater depth.
Instances
| MonadTrans Series Source # | |
Defined in Test.SmallCheck.SeriesMonad | |
| Monad (Series m) Source # | |
| Functor (Series m) Source # | |
| Applicative (Series m) Source # | |
| Alternative (Series m) Source # | |
| MonadPlus (Series m) Source # | |
| Monad m => MonadLogic (Series m) Source # | |
Defined in Test.SmallCheck.SeriesMonad | |
class Monad m => Serial m a where Source #
Instances
class Monad m => CoSerial m a where Source #
Methods
coseries :: Series m b -> Series m (a -> b) Source #
A proper coseries implementation should pass the depth unchanged to
its first argument. Doing otherwise will make enumeration of curried
functions non-uniform in their arguments.
coseries :: (Generic a, GCoSerial m (Rep a)) => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b) Source #
A proper coseries implementation should pass the depth unchanged to
its first argument. Doing otherwise will make enumeration of curried
functions non-uniform in their arguments.
Instances
Generic implementations
genericCoseries :: (Monad m, Generic a, GCoSerial m (Rep a)) => Series m b -> Series m (a -> b) Source #
Convenient wrappers
Positive x: guarantees that x > 0.
Constructors
| Positive | |
Fields
| |
Instances
newtype NonNegative a Source #
NonNegative x: guarantees that x >= 0.
Constructors
| NonNegative | |
Fields
| |
Instances
NonEmpty xs: guarantees that xs is not null
Constructors
| NonEmpty | |
Fields
| |
Other useful definitions
(>>-) :: MonadLogic m => m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b infixl 1 #
Fair conjunction. Similarly to the previous function, consider the distributivity law for MonadPlus:
(mplus a b) >>= k = (a >>= k) `mplus` (b >>= k)
If 'a >>= k' can backtrack arbitrarily many tmes, (b >>= k) may never be considered. (>>-) takes similar care to consider both branches of a disjunctive computation.
localDepth :: (Depth -> Depth) -> Series m a -> Series m a Source #
Run a series with a modified depth
generate :: (Depth -> [a]) -> Series m a Source #
A simple series specified by a function from depth to the list of values up to that depth.
limit :: forall m a. Monad m => Int -> Series m a -> Series m a Source #
Limit a Series to its first n elements
listSeries :: Serial Identity a => Depth -> [a] Source #
Given a depth, return the list of values generated by a Serial instance.
Example, list all integers up to depth 1:
listSeries 1 :: [Int] -- returns [0,1,-1]
list :: Depth -> Series Identity a -> [a] Source #
Return the list of values generated by a Series. Useful for
debugging Serial instances.
Examples:
list 3
series:: [Int] -- returns [0,1,-1,2,-2,3,-3]list 3 (
series::SeriesIdentityInt) -- returns [0,1,-1,2,-2,3,-3]list 2
series:: [[Bool]] -- returns [[],[True],[False]]
The first two are equivalent. The second has a more explicit type binding.
fixDepth :: Series m a -> Series m (Series m a) Source #
Fix the depth of a series at the current level. The resulting series will no longer depend on the "ambient" depth.
decDepthChecked :: Series m a -> Series m a -> Series m a Source #
If the current depth is 0, evaluate the first argument. Otherwise, evaluate the second argument with decremented depth.