--- title: "Getting Started" vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Getting started} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} --- ## A very simple example Suppose you have a file ``biggest.R`` with the following function: ```{r} biggest <- function(x,y) {max(c(x,y))} ``` To test this create a file called ``test_biggest.R`` in the same directory containing: ```{r, eval=FALSE} library(unittest, quietly = TRUE) source('biggest.R') ok(biggest(3,4) == 4, "two numbers") ok(biggest(c(5,3),c(3,4)) == 5, "two vectors") ``` Now in an ``R`` session ``source`` the test file: ```{r, eval=FALSE} source('test_biggest.R') ``` and you will see output like this ``` ok - two numbers ok - two vectors ``` and that's it. Now each time you edit ``biggest.R`` re-sourcing ``test_biggest.R`` reloads your function and runs your unit tests. ## Comparing results Suppose our ``biggest`` function was broken, for example: ```{r} biggest <- function(x,y) { 4 } ``` Our tests from earlier would return: ``` ok - two numbers not ok - two vectors # Test returned non-TRUE value: # [1] FALSE ``` It would be more useful if we saw what ``biggest()`` actually returned, to help work out the problem. To help with this we can use ``ut_cmp_equal``. If we rewrite our test to: ```{r, eval=FALSE} library(unittest, quietly = TRUE) source('biggest.R') ok(ut_cmp_equal(biggest(3,4), 4), "two numbers") ok(ut_cmp_equal(biggest(c(5,3),c(3,4)), 5), "two vectors") ``` Now the test output shows what we did get (in red) and what we expected (in green):
ok - two numbers not ok - two vectors # Test returned non-TRUE value: # Mean relative difference: 0.25 # --- biggest(c(5, 3), c(3, 4)) # +++ 5 # [1] [-4-]{+5+}This is particularly useful when there are many values returned:
> ok(ut_cmp_equal(c(1,2,3,4,5), c(1,8,8,4,5))) not ok - ut_cmp_equal(c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5), c(1, 8, 8, 4, 5)) # Test returned non-TRUE value: # Mean relative difference: 2.2 # --- c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) # +++ c(1, 8, 8, 4, 5) # [1] 1 [-2 3-]{+8 8+} 4 5