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README.md

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This is the PHP port of Hamcrest Matchers

Hamcrest is a matching library originally written for Java, but subsequently ported to many other languages. hamcrest-php is the official PHP port of Hamcrest and essentially follows a literal translation of the original Java API for Hamcrest, with a few Exceptions, mostly down to PHP language barriers:

  1. instanceOf($theClass) is actually anInstanceOf($theClass)

  2. both(containsString('a'))->and(containsString('b')) is actually both(containsString('a'))->andAlso(containsString('b'))

  3. either(containsString('a'))->or(containsString('b')) is actually either(containsString('a'))->orElse(containsString('b'))

  4. Unless it would be non-semantic for a matcher to do so, hamcrest-php allows dynamic typing for it's input, in "the PHP way". Exception are where semantics surrounding the type itself would suggest otherwise, such as stringContains() and greaterThan().

  5. Several official matchers have not been ported because they don't make sense or don't apply in PHP:

    • typeCompatibleWith($theClass)
    • eventFrom($source)
    • hasProperty($name) **
    • samePropertyValuesAs($obj) **
  6. When most of the collections matchers are finally ported, PHP-specific aliases will probably be created due to a difference in naming conventions between Java's Arrays, Collections, Sets and Maps compared with PHP's Arrays.


** [Unless we consider POPO's (Plain Old PHP Objects) akin to JavaBeans] - The POPO thing is a joke. Java devs coin the term POJO's (Plain Old Java Objects).

Usage

Hamcrest matchers are easy to use as:

php
\Hamcrest\MatcherAssert::assertThat('a', \Hamcrest\Matchers::equalToIgnoringCase('A'));

Alternatively, you can use the global proxy-functions:

php
$result = true;
// with an identifier
assertThat("result should be true", $result, equalTo(true));

// without an identifier
assertThat($result, equalTo(true));

// evaluate a boolean expression
assertThat($result === true);

// with syntactic sugar is()
assertThat(true, is(true));

[!NOTE] To prevent tests from being marked as Risky (the This test did not perform any assertions message) add this code to your test case tearDown method:

php
$this->addToAssertionCount(\Hamcrest\MatcherAssert::getCount());
\Hamcrest\MatcherAssert::resetCount();

[!WARNING] the global proxy-functions aren't autoloaded by default, so you will need to load them first:

php
\Hamcrest\Util::registerGlobalFunctions();

For brevity, all of the examples below use the proxy-functions.

Documentation

A tutorial can be found on the Hamcrest site.

Available Matchers

Array

  • anArray - evaluates an array
php
assertThat([], anArray());
  • hasItemInArray - check if item exists in array
php
$list = range(2, 7, 2);
$item = 4;
assertThat($list, hasItemInArray($item));
  • hasValue - alias of hasItemInArray

  • arrayContainingInAnyOrder - check if array contains elements in any order

php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], arrayContainingInAnyOrder([6, 4, 2]));
assertThat([2, 4, 6], arrayContainingInAnyOrder([4, 2, 6]));
  • containsInAnyOrder - alias of arrayContainingInAnyOrder

  • arrayContaining - An array with elements that match the given matchers in the same order.

php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], arrayContaining([2, 4, 6]));
assertthat([2, 4, 6], not(arrayContaining([6, 4, 2])));
  • contains - check array in same order
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], contains([2, 4, 6]));
  • hasKeyInArray - check if array has given key
php
assertThat(['name'=> 'foobar'], hasKeyInArray('name'));
  • hasKey - alias of hasKeyInArray

  • hasKeyValuePair - check if array has given key, value pair

php
assertThat(['name'=> 'foobar'], hasKeyValuePair('name', 'foobar'));
  • hasEntry - same as hasKeyValuePair

  • arrayWithSize - check array has given size

php
assertthat([2, 4, 6], arrayWithSize(3));
  • emptyArray - check if array is empty
php
assertThat([], emptyArray());
  • nonEmptyArray
php
assertThat([1], nonEmptyArray());

Collection

  • emptyTraversable - check if traversable is empty
php
$empty_it = new EmptyIterator;
assertThat($empty_it, emptyTraversable());
  • nonEmptyTraversable - check if traversable isn't empty
php
$non_empty_it = new ArrayIterator(range(1, 10));
assertThat($non_empty_it, nonEmptyTraversable());
a
  • traversableWithSize
php
$non_empty_it = new ArrayIterator(range(1, 10));
assertThat($non_empty_it, traversableWithSize(count(range(1, 10))));
`

Core

  • allOf - Evaluates to true only if ALL of the passed in matchers evaluate to true.
php
assertThat([2,4,6], allOf(hasValue(2), arrayWithSize(3)));
  • anyOf - Evaluates to true if ANY of the passed in matchers evaluate to true.
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], anyOf(hasValue(8), hasValue(2)));
  • noneOf - Evaluates to false if ANY of the passed in matchers evaluate to true.
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], noneOf(hasValue(1), hasValue(3)));
  • both + andAlso - This is useful for fluently combining matchers that must both pass.
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], both(hasValue(2))->andAlso(hasValue(4)));
  • either + orElse - This is useful for fluently combining matchers where either may pass,
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], either(hasValue(2))->orElse(hasValue(4)));
  • describedAs - Wraps an existing matcher and overrides the description when it fails.
php
$expected = "Dog";
$found = null;
// this assertion would result error message as Expected: is not null but: was null
//assertThat("Expected {$expected}, got {$found}", $found, is(notNullValue()));
// and this assertion would result error message as Expected: Dog but: was null
//assertThat($found, describedAs($expected, notNullValue()));
  • everyItem - A matcher to apply to every element in an array.
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], everyItem(notNullValue()));
  • hasItem - check array has given item, it can take a matcher argument
php
assertThat([2, 4, 6], hasItem(equalTo(2)));
  • hasItems - check array has given items, it can take multiple matcher as arguments
php
assertThat([1, 3, 5], hasItems(equalTo(1), equalTo(3)));

Object

  • hasToString - check __toString or toString method
php
class Foo {
    public $name = null;

    public function __toString() {
        return "[Foo]Instance";
    }
}
$foo = new Foo;
assertThat($foo, hasToString(equalTo("[Foo]Instance")));
  • equalTo - compares two instances using comparison operator '=='
php
$foo = new Foo;
$foo2 = new Foo;
assertThat($foo, equalTo($foo2));
  • identicalTo - compares two instances using identity operator '==='
php
assertThat($foo, is(not(identicalTo($foo2))));
  • anInstanceOf - check instance is an instance|sub-class of given class
php
assertThat($foo, anInstanceOf(Foo::class));
  • any - alias of anInstanceOf

  • nullValue check null

php
assertThat(null, is(nullValue()));
  • notNullValue check not null
php
assertThat("", notNullValue());
  • sameInstance - check for same instance
php
assertThat($foo, is(not(sameInstance($foo2))));
assertThat($foo, is(sameInstance($foo)));
  • typeOf- check type
php
assertThat(1, typeOf("integer"));
  • notSet - check if instance property is not set
php
assertThat($foo, notSet("name"));
  • set - check if instance property is set
php
$foo->name = "bar";
assertThat($foo, set("name"));

Numbers

  • closeTo - check value close to a range
php
assertThat(3, closeTo(3, 0.5));
  • comparesEqualTo - check with '=='
php
assertThat(2, comparesEqualTo(2));
  • greaterThan - check '>'
assertThat(2, greaterThan(1));
  • greaterThanOrEqualTo
php
assertThat(2, greaterThanOrEqualTo(2));
  • atLeast - The value is >= given value
php
assertThat(3, atLeast(2));
  • lessThan
php
assertThat(2, lessThan(3));
  • lessThanOrEqualTo
php
assertThat(2, lessThanOrEqualTo(3));
  • atMost - The value is <= given value
php
assertThat(2, atMost(3));

String

  • emptyString - check for empty string
php
assertThat("", emptyString());
  • isEmptyOrNullString
php
assertThat(null, isEmptyOrNullString());
  • nullOrEmptyString
php
assertThat("", nullOrEmptyString());
  • isNonEmptyString
php
assertThat("foo", isNonEmptyString());
  • nonEmptyString
php
assertThat("foo", nonEmptyString());
  • equalToIgnoringCase
php
assertThat("Foo", equalToIgnoringCase("foo"));
  • equalToIgnoringWhiteSpace
php
assertThat(" Foo ", equalToIgnoringWhiteSpace("Foo"));
  • matchesPattern - matches with regex pattern
php
assertThat("foobarbaz", matchesPattern('/(foo)(bar)(baz)/'));
  • containsString - check for substring
php
assertThat("foobar", containsString("foo"));
  • containsStringIgnoringCase
php
assertThat("fooBar", containsStringIgnoringCase("bar"));
  • stringContainsInOrder
php
assertThat("foo", stringContainsInOrder("foo"));
  • endsWith - check string that ends with given value
php
assertThat("foo", endsWith("oo"));
  • startsWith - check string that starts with given value
php
assertThat("bar", startsWith("ba"));

Type-checking

  • arrayValue - check array type
php
assertThat([], arrayValue());
  • booleanValue
php
assertThat(true, booleanValue());
  • boolValue - alias of booleanValue

  • callableValue - check if value is callable

php
$func = function () {};
assertThat($func, callableValue());
  • doubleValue
php
assertThat(3.14, doubleValue());
  • floatValue
php
assertThat(3.14, floatValue());
  • integerValue
php
assertThat(1, integerValue());
  • intValue - alias of integerValue

  • numericValue - check if value is numeric

php
assertThat("123", numericValue());
  • objectValue - check for object
php
$obj = new stdClass;
assertThat($obj, objectValue());
  • anObject
php
assertThat($obj, anObject());
  • resourceValue - check resource type
php
$fp = fopen("/tmp/foo", "w+");
assertThat($fp, resourceValue());
  • scalarValue - check for scalar value
php
assertThat(1, scalarValue());
  • stringValue
php
assertThat("", stringValue());

XML

  • hasXPath - check xml with a xpath
php
$xml = <<<XML
<books>
  <book>
    <isbn>1</isbn>   
  </book>
  <book>
    <isbn>2</isbn>   
  </book>
</books>
XML;

$doc = new DOMDocument;
$doc->loadXML($xml);
assertThat($doc, hasXPath("book", 2));