commit | 08844e7e57fe9c604579962ab3848a4b9a820b2d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Phil Nash <github@philnash.me> | Thu Nov 05 18:52:18 2015 +0000 |
committer | Phil Nash <github@philnash.me> | Thu Nov 05 18:52:18 2015 +0000 |
tree | b08cd08ff15789de39881a69fe89bf710c1b02f5 | |
parent | 054e3c5b4319ee21b7160736d0bdde2df438ad5f [diff] |
build 1.3.0-develop.1 I've incremented the minor release number. This is a slight abuse of semantic versioning so let me explain: I've slightly changed how matchers are used. The matcher macro (REQUIRE_THAT/ CHECK_THAT) used to introduce the Catch::Matchers namespace before the macro token for the matcher, to save you having import the namespace yourself. The trouble is if the matcher token is not a simple matcher (can now be an expression) this breaks! So I've removed that qualification. Now if you use Matchers you'll have to do somethings like using namespace Catch::Matchers to bring them in. This is a breaking change - but, OTTOH, Matchers are an undocumented "beta' feature that I've stated in the past is not guaranteed to have a stable API - so I don't think this warrants a major version change - but I did want to make it significant enough that people do notice that something is going on - and perhaps lead them to this commit message.
v1.3.0-develop.1
Please see this page if you are updating from a version before 1.0
[The latest, single header, version can be downloaded directly using this link]
Catch stands for C++ Automated Test Cases in Headers and is a multi-paradigm automated test framework for C++ and Objective-C (and, maybe, C). It is implemented entirely in a set of header files, but is packaged up as a single header for extra convenience.
This documentation comprises these three parts:
The documentation will continue until morale improves