When writing tests in Rust, you'll probably use assert_eq!(a, b)
a lot.
If such a test fails, it will present all the details of a
and b
, but you have to spot, the differences yourself, which is not always straightforward, like here:
Wouldn't that task be much easier with a colorful diff?
Yep — and you only need one line of code to make it happen:
#[macro_use] extern crate pretty_assertions;
// 1. add the `pretty_assertions` dependency to `Cargo.toml`. // 2. insert this line at the top of your crate root or integration test #[macro_use] extern crate pretty_assertions; fn main() { #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)] struct Foo { lorem: &'static str, ipsum: u32, dolor: Result<String, String>, } let x = Some(Foo { lorem: "Hello World!", ipsum: 42, dolor: Ok("hey".to_string())}); let y = Some(Foo { lorem: "Hello Wrold!", ipsum: 42, dolor: Ok("hey ho!".to_string())}); assert_eq!(x, y); }
Specify it as [dev-dependencies]
and it will only be used for compiling tests, examples, and benchmarks. This way the compile time of cargo build
won't be affected!
In your crate root, also add #[cfg(test)]
to the crate import, like this:
#[cfg(test)] // <-- not needed in examples + integration tests #[macro_use] extern crate pretty_assertions;
#[macro_use] extern crate pretty_assertions
, if you want colorful diffs there.assert_ne
is also switched to multi-line presentation, but does not show a diff.Licensed under either of
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.