-- -*- Mode: Haskell; -*- -- -- QuickCheck tests for Megaparsec, utility functions for parser testing. -- -- Copyright © 2015 Megaparsec contributors -- -- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without -- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are -- met: -- -- * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, -- this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. -- -- * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright -- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the -- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. -- -- This software is provided by the copyright holders "as is" and any -- express or implied warranties, including, but not limited to, the implied -- warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose are -- disclaimed. In no event shall the copyright holders be liable for any -- direct, indirect, incidental, special, exemplary, or consequential -- damages (including, but not limited to, procurement of substitute goods -- or services; loss of use, data, or profits; or business interruption) -- however caused and on any theory of liability, whether in contract, -- strict liability, or tort (including negligence or otherwise) arising in -- any way out of the use of this software, even if advised of the -- possibility of such damage. module Util ( checkParser , simpleParse , checkChar , checkString , (/=\) , abcRow , abcRow' , posErr , uneCh , uneStr , uneSpec , uneEof , exCh , exStr , exSpec , exEof , msg , showToken ) where import Data.Maybe (maybeToList) import Test.QuickCheck import Text.Megaparsec.Error import Text.Megaparsec.Pos import Text.Megaparsec.Prim import Text.Megaparsec.ShowToken import Text.Megaparsec.String -- | @checkParser p r s@ tries to run parser @p@ on input @s@ to parse -- entire @s@. Result of the parsing is compared with expected result @r@, -- it should match, otherwise the property doesn't hold and the test fails. checkParser :: (Eq a, Show a) => Parser a -> Either ParseError a -> String -> Property checkParser p r s = simpleParse p s === r -- | @simpleParse p s@ runs parser @p@ on input @s@ and returns corresponding -- result of type @Either ParseError a@, where @a@ is type of parsed -- value. This parser tries to parser end of file too and name of input file -- is always empty string. simpleParse :: Parser a -> String -> Either ParseError a simpleParse p = parse (p <* eof) "" -- | @checkChar p test label s@ runs parser @p@ on input @s@ and checks if -- the parser correctly parses single character that satisfies @test@. The -- character may be labelled, in this case @label@ is used to check quality -- of error messages. checkChar :: Parser Char -> (Char -> Bool) -> Maybe String -> String -> Property checkChar p f l' s = checkParser p r s where h = head s l = exSpec <$> maybeToList l' r | null s = posErr 0 s (uneEof : l) | length s == 1 && f h = Right h | not (f h) = posErr 0 s (uneCh h : l) | otherwise = posErr 1 s [uneCh (s !! 1), exEof] -- | @checkString p a test label s@ runs parser @p@ on input @s@ and checks if -- the result is equal to @a@ and also quality of error messages. @test@ is -- used to compare tokens. @label@ is used as expected representation of -- parser's result in error messages. checkString :: Parser String -> String -> (Char -> Char -> Bool) -> String -> String -> Property checkString p a' test l s' = checkParser p (w a' 0 s') s' where w [] _ [] = Right a' w [] i (s:_) = posErr i s' [uneCh s, exEof] w _ 0 [] = posErr 0 s' [uneEof, exSpec l] w _ i [] = posErr 0 s' [uneStr (take i s'), exSpec l] w (a:as) i (s:ss) | test a s = w as i' ss | otherwise = posErr 0 s' [uneStr (take i' s'), exSpec l] where i' = succ i infix 4 /=\ -- | @p /=\\ x@ runs parser @p@ on empty input and compares its result -- (which should be successful) with @x@. Succeeds when the result is equal -- to @x@, prints counterexample on failure. (/=\) :: (Eq a, Show a) => Parser a -> a -> Property p /=\ x = simpleParse p "" === Right x -- | @abcRow a b c@ generates string consisting of character “a” repeated -- @a@ times, character “b” repeated @b@ times, and finally character “c” -- repeated @c@ times. abcRow :: Int -> Int -> Int -> String abcRow a b c = replicate a 'a' ++ replicate b 'b' ++ replicate c 'c' -- | @abcRow' a b c@ generates string that includes character “a” if @a@ is -- 'True', then optionally character “b” if @b@ is 'True', then character -- “c” if @c@ is 'True'. abcRow' :: Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> String abcRow' a b c = abcRow (fromEnum a) (fromEnum b) (fromEnum c) -- | @posErr pos s ms@ is an easy way to model result of parser that -- fails. @pos@ is how many tokens (characters) has been consumed before -- failure. @s@ is input of the parser. @ms@ is a list, collection of -- 'Message's. See 'uneStr', 'uneCh', 'uneSpec', 'exStr', 'exCh', and -- 'exSpec' for easy ways to create error messages. posErr :: Int -> String -> [Message] -> Either ParseError a posErr pos s = Left . foldr addErrorMessage (newErrorUnknown errPos) where errPos = updatePosString (initialPos "") (take pos s) -- | @uneCh s@ returns message created with 'Unexpected' constructor that -- tells the system that char @s@ is unexpected. uneCh :: Char -> Message uneCh s = Unexpected $ showToken s -- | @uneStr s@ returns message created with 'Unexpected' constructor that -- tells the system that string @s@ is unexpected. uneStr :: String -> Message uneStr s = Unexpected $ showToken s -- | @uneSpec s@ returns message created with 'Unexpected' constructor that -- tells the system that @s@ is unexpected. This is different from 'uneStr' -- in that it doesn't use 'showToken' but rather pass its argument unaltered -- allowing for “special” labels. uneSpec :: String -> Message uneSpec = Unexpected -- | @uneEof@ represents message “unexpected end of input”. uneEof :: Message uneEof = Unexpected "end of input" -- | @exCh s@ returns message created with 'Expected' constructor that tells -- the system that character @s@ is expected. exCh :: Char -> Message exCh s = Expected $ showToken s -- | @exStr s@ returns message created with 'Expected' constructor that tells -- the system that string @s@ is expected. exStr :: String -> Message exStr s = Expected $ showToken s -- | @exSpec s@ returns message created with 'Expected' constructor that tells -- the system that @s@ is expected. This is different from 'exStr' in that -- it doesn't use 'showToken' but rather pass its argument unaltered -- allowing for “special” labels. exSpec :: String -> Message exSpec = Expected -- | @exEof@ represents message “expecting end of input”. exEof :: Message exEof = Expected "end of input" -- | @msg s@ return message created with 'Message' constructor. msg :: String -> Message msg = Message