struct Spectator::Mocks::NullObject(T)

Included Modules

Defined in:

spectator/mocks/null_object.cr

Constructors

Macro Summary

Instance Method Summary

Macros inherited from module Spectator::Mocks::Stubbable

stub(method) stub

Constructor Detail

def self.new(object : T) #

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Macro Detail

macro method_missing(call) #

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Instance Method Detail

def !=(other) #
Description copied from class Object

Returns true if this object is not equal to other.

By default this method is implemented as !(self == other) so there's no need to override this unless there's a more efficient way to do it.


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def !~(other) #
Description copied from class Object

Shortcut to !(self =~ other).


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def ==(other) : Bool #

Redefine virtually all methods to support stubs.

FIXME Reuse method signature generation code.


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def ===(other) #
Description copied from class Object

Case equality.

The #=== method is used in a case ... when ... end expression.

For example, this code:

case value
when x
  # something when x
when y
  # something when y
end

Is equivalent to this code:

if x === value
  # something when x
elsif y === value
  # something when y
end

Object simply implements #=== by invoking #==, but subclasses (notably Regex) can override it to provide meaningful case-equality semantics.


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def =~(other) #
Description copied from class Object

Pattern match.

Overridden by descendants (notably Regex and String) to provide meaningful pattern-match semantics.


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def __mocks(*args, **options) #

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def __mocks(*args, **options, &) #

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def dup #
Description copied from struct Value

Returns a shallow copy of this object.

Because Value is a value type, this method returns self, which already involves a shallow copy of this object because value types are passed by value.


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def hash(hasher) #
Description copied from struct Struct

See Object#hash(hasher)


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def hash #
Description copied from class Object

Generates an UInt64 hash value for this object.

This method must have the property that a == b implies a.hash == b.hash.

The hash value is used along with #== by the Hash class to determine if two objects reference the same hash key.

Subclasses must not override this method. Instead, they must define #hash(hasher), though usually the macro def_hash can be used to generate this method.


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def in?(collection : Object) : Bool #
Description copied from class Object

Returns true if self is included in the collection argument.

10.in?(0..100)     # => true
10.in?({0, 1, 10}) # => true
10.in?(0, 1, 10)   # => true
10.in?(:foo, :bar) # => false

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def in?(*values : Object) : Bool #
Description copied from class Object

Returns true if self is included in the collection argument.

10.in?(0..100)     # => true
10.in?({0, 1, 10}) # => true
10.in?(0, 1, 10)   # => true
10.in?(:foo, :bar) # => false

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def inspect(io : IO) : Nil #

Constructs a string representation of the double.


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def inspect : String #
Description copied from class Object

Returns an unambiguous and information-rich string representation of this object, typically intended for developers.

This method should usually not be overridden. It delegates to #inspect(IO) which can be overridden for custom implementations.

Also see #to_s.


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def itself #
Description copied from class Object

Returns self.

str = "hello"
str.itself.object_id == str.object_id # => true

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def not_nil!(message) #
Description copied from class Object

Returns self.

Nil overrides this method and raises NilAssertionError, see Nil#not_nil!.

This method can be used to remove Nil from a union type. However, it should be avoided if possible and is often considered a code smell. Usually, you can write code in a way that the compiler can safely exclude Nil types, for example using if var. #not_nil! is only meant as a last resort when there's no other way to explain this to the compiler. Either way, consider instead raising a concrete exception with a descriptive message.

message has no effect. It is only used by Nil#not_nil!(message = nil).


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def not_nil! #
Description copied from class Object

Returns self.

Nil overrides this method and raises NilAssertionError, see Nil#not_nil!.

This method can be used to remove Nil from a union type. However, it should be avoided if possible and is often considered a code smell. Usually, you can write code in a way that the compiler can safely exclude Nil types, for example using if var. #not_nil! is only meant as a last resort when there's no other way to explain this to the compiler. Either way, consider instead raising a concrete exception with a descriptive message.


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def pretty_inspect(width = 79, newline = "\n", indent = 0) : String #
Description copied from class Object

Returns a pretty printed version of self.


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def pretty_print(pp : PrettyPrint) : Nil #
Description copied from class Object

Pretty prints self into the given printer.

By default appends a text that is the result of invoking #inspect on self. Subclasses should override for custom pretty printing.


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def pretty_print(pp) : Nil #

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def tap(&) #
Description copied from class Object

Yields self to the block, and then returns self.

The primary purpose of this method is to "tap into" a method chain, in order to perform operations on intermediate results within the chain.

(1..10).tap { |x| puts "original: #{x.inspect}" }
  .to_a.tap { |x| puts "array: #{x.inspect}" }
  .select { |x| x % 2 == 0 }.tap { |x| puts "evens: #{x.inspect}" }
  .map { |x| x*x }.tap { |x| puts "squares: #{x.inspect}" }

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def to_s(io : IO) : Nil #
Description copied from struct Struct

Same as #inspect(io).


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def to_s : String #
Description copied from class Object

Returns a nicely readable and concise string representation of this object, typically intended for users.

This method should usually not be overridden. It delegates to #to_s(IO) which can be overridden for custom implementations.

Also see #inspect.


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def try(&) #
Description copied from class Object

Yields self. Nil overrides this method and doesn't yield.

This method is useful for dealing with nilable types, to safely perform operations only when the value is not nil.

# First program argument in downcase, or nil
ARGV[0]?.try &.downcase

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def unsafe_as(type : T.class) forall T #
Description copied from class Object

Unsafely reinterprets the bytes of an object as being of another type.

This method is useful to treat a type that is represented as a chunk of bytes as another type where those bytes convey useful information. As an example, you can check the individual bytes of an Int32:

0x01020304.unsafe_as(StaticArray(UInt8, 4)) # => StaticArray[4, 3, 2, 1]

Or treat the bytes of a Float64 as an Int64:

1.234_f64.unsafe_as(Int64) # => 4608236261112822104

This method is unsafe because it behaves unpredictably when the given type doesn't have the same bytesize as the receiver, or when the given type representation doesn't semantically match the underlying bytes.

Also note that because #unsafe_as is a regular method, unlike the pseudo-method as, you can't specify some types in the type grammar using a short notation, so specifying a static array must always be done as StaticArray(T, N), a tuple as Tuple(...) and so on, never as UInt8[4] or {Int32, Int32}.


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