use strict;
use warnings;
-use Test::More tests => 74;
+use Test::More;
use Test::Exception;
-
{
# NOTE:
- # this tests that repeated role
- # composition will not cause
+ # this tests that repeated role
+ # composition will not cause
# a conflict between two methods
# which are actually the same anyway
-
+
{
package RootA;
use Moose::Role;
package SubAB;
use Moose;
- ::lives_ok {
- with "SubAA", "RootA";
+ ::lives_ok {
+ with "SubAA", "RootA";
} '... role was composed as expected';
}
can_ok( $i, "foo" );
my $foo_rv;
- lives_ok {
- $foo_rv = $i->foo;
+ lives_ok {
+ $foo_rv = $i->foo;
} '... called foo successfully';
is($foo_rv, "RootA::foo", "... got the right foo rv");
}
{
# NOTE:
- # this edge cases shows the application of
- # an after modifier over a method which
+ # this edge cases shows the application of
+ # an after modifier over a method which
# was added during role composotion.
# The way this will work is as follows:
- # role SubBA will consume RootB and
- # get a local copy of RootB::foo, it
+ # role SubBA will consume RootB and
+ # get a local copy of RootB::foo, it
# will also store a deferred after modifier
- # to be applied to whatever class SubBA is
+ # to be applied to whatever class SubBA is
# composed into.
# When class SubBB comsumed role SubBA, the
- # RootB::foo method is added to SubBB, then
- # the deferred after modifier from SubBA is
+ # RootB::foo method is added to SubBB, then
+ # the deferred after modifier from SubBA is
# applied to it.
- # It is important to note that the application
- # of the after modifier does not happen until
+ # It is important to note that the application
+ # of the after modifier does not happen until
# role SubBA is composed into SubAA.
-
+
{
package RootB;
use Moose::Role;
package SubBB;
use Moose;
- ::lives_ok {
+ ::lives_ok {
with "SubBA";
} '... composed the role successfully';
}
isa_ok( my $i = SubBB->new, "SubBB" );
can_ok( $i, "foo" );
-
+
my $foo_rv;
- lives_ok {
- $foo_rv = $i->foo
+ lives_ok {
+ $foo_rv = $i->foo
} '... called foo successfully';
is( $foo_rv, "RootB::foo", "foo rv" );
is( $i->counter, 1, "after hook called" );
-
+
lives_ok { $i->foo } '... called foo successfully (again)';
is( $i->counter, 2, "after hook called (again)" );
-
+
ok(SubBA->meta->has_method('foo'), '... this has the foo method');
#my $subba_foo_rv;
- #lives_ok {
- # $subba_foo_rv = SubBA::foo();
+ #lives_ok {
+ # $subba_foo_rv = SubBA::foo();
#} '... called the sub as a function correctly';
#is($subba_foo_rv, 'RootB::foo', '... the SubBA->foo is still the RootB version');
}
# NOTE:
# this checks that an override method
# does not try to trample over a locally
- # composed in method. In this case the
- # RootC::foo, which is composed into
- # SubCA cannot be trampled with an
+ # composed in method. In this case the
+ # RootC::foo, which is composed into
+ # SubCA cannot be trampled with an
# override of 'foo'
{
package RootC;
with "RootC";
- ::dies_ok {
+ ::dies_ok {
override foo => sub { "overridden" };
} '... cannot compose an override over a local method';
}
}
# NOTE:
-# need to talk to Yuval about the motivation behind
-# this test, I am not sure we are testing anything
+# need to talk to Yuval about the motivation behind
+# this test, I am not sure we are testing anything
# useful here (although more tests cant hurt)
{
with "ConcreteA";
# NOTE:
- # this was originally override, but
+ # this was originally override, but
# that wont work (see above set of tests)
# so I switched it to around.
- # However, this may not be testing the
+ # However, this may not be testing the
# same thing that was originally intended
around other => sub {
return ( (shift)->() . " + c" );
is( eval { $class->another }, "abstract", "provided by abstract" );
is( eval { $class->other }, "concrete a", "provided by concrete a" );
is( eval { $class->method }, "concrete b", "provided by concrete b" );
- }
+ }
{
package ClassWithSome;
use Moose;
-
+
eval { with ::shuffle qw/ConcreteC ConcreteB/ };
::ok( !$@, "composition without abstract" ) || ::diag $@;
is( eval { $class->method }, "concrete b", "provided by concrete b" );
}
}
+
+done_testing;