X-Git-Url: http://git.vpit.fr/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2FTest%2FLeaner.pm;h=2ada2039793d8fe96e4cf97a9bd6d61298491c6c;hb=d5f69b6cc4f2193b93768f4a984d854a9dc7f9d4;hp=33650067115fab72c5794ab57a78455d6d4213a1;hpb=2f062217460c40eef7ce43bf273e3f8c09e0673c;p=perl%2Fmodules%2FTest-Leaner.git diff --git a/lib/Test/Leaner.pm b/lib/Test/Leaner.pm index 3365006..2ada203 100644 --- a/lib/Test/Leaner.pm +++ b/lib/Test/Leaner.pm @@ -37,16 +37,16 @@ Its functions behave the same as their L counterparts, except for th =item * Stringification isn't forced on the test operands. -However, L honors C<'bool'> overloading, L and L honor C<'eq'> overloading (and just that one) and L honors whichever overloading category corresponds to the specified operator. +However, L honors C<'bool'> overloading, L and L honor C<'eq'> overloading (and just that one), L honors C<'ne'> overloading, and L honors whichever overloading category corresponds to the specified operator. =item * -L, L, L, L, L, L, L and L are all guaranteed to return the truth value of the test. +L, L, L, L, L, L, L, L and L are all guaranteed to return the truth value of the test. =item * L and L don't special case regular expressions that are passed as C<'/.../'> strings. -A string regexp argument is always treated as a the source of the regexp, making C and C equivalent to each other and to C (and likewise for C). +A string regexp argument is always treated as the source of the regexp, making C and C equivalent to each other and to C (and likewise for C). =item * @@ -61,6 +61,7 @@ If the two first arguments present parallel memory cycles, the test may result i =item * The tests don't output any kind of default diagnostic in case of failure ; the rationale being that if you have a large number of tests and a lot of them are failing, then you don't want to be flooded by diagnostics. +Moreover, this allows a much faster variant of L. =item * @@ -120,7 +121,7 @@ our @EXPORT = qw< =head2 C If this environment variable is set, L will replace its functions by those from L. -Moreover, the symbols that are imported you C will be those from L, but you can still only import the symbols originally defined in L (hence the functions from L that are not implemented in L will not be imported). +Moreover, the symbols that are imported when you C will be those from L, but you can still only import the symbols originally defined in L (hence the functions from L that are not implemented in L will not be imported). If your version of L is too old and doesn't have some symbols (like L or L), they will be replaced in L by croaking stubs. This may be useful if your L-based test script fails and you want extra diagnostics. @@ -179,6 +180,7 @@ if ($ENV{PERL_TEST_LEANER_USES_TEST_MORE}) { my $import = sub { shift; + my @imports = &_handle_import_args; @imports = @EXPORT unless @imports; my @test_more_imports; @@ -191,7 +193,10 @@ if ($ENV{PERL_TEST_LEANER_USES_TEST_MORE}) { *{$pkg."::$_"} = $leaner_stash->{$_}; } } + my $test_more_import = 'Test::More'->can('import'); + return unless $test_more_import; + @_ = ( 'Test::More', @_, @@ -201,6 +206,7 @@ if ($ENV{PERL_TEST_LEANER_USES_TEST_MORE}) { lock $plan if THREADSAFE; push @_, 'no_diag' if $no_diag; } + goto $test_more_import; };