How to call a function if unit test fails?
2 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
If this is possible in a script unit test, that would be great. I want to do the following:
%% Unit test
a = 1;
b = 2;
fail = assert(a == b)
if fail
fail_function;
end
fuction fail_function
disp('Test failed');
end
I've also tried finding something to do this using class-based unit testing, but I haven't found anything. Thank you.
1 Comment
Accepted Answer
Andy Campbell
on 30 Jan 2020
Edited: Andy Campbell
on 30 Jan 2020
Hi there,
If you really want to stay in a script based test, the best way to do this would to be to use a try-catch
%% Unit test
a = 1;
b = 2;
try
assert(a == b)
catch ex
fail_function;
rethrow(ex);
end
function fail_function
disp('Test failed');
end
However, I think that you can do something pretty cleanly using function based tests, which might be more approachable for your use case than classes, but has a bit of extra nice-ness. In this case you can just pass the function handle to what you want to do as a diagnostic argument to the verification function:
function tests = my_test
tests = functiontests(localfunctions);
end
function testMyCode(testCase)
%% Unit test
a = 1;
b = 2;
verifyEqual(testCase, a, b, @fail_function)
end
function fail_function
disp('Test failed');
end
Note that you also get access to verifyEqual and many other functions for qualification. In the case of verifyEqual vs assert(a==b), verifyEqual actually provides a lot of testing specific strictness and better diagnostics when things fail. It should handle edge cases for you.
More Answers (1)
Steven Lord
on 30 Jan 2020
Edited: Steven Lord
on 30 Jan 2020
If all you want your function to do is display a diagnostic message, just modify your call to assert slightly.
%% Unit test
a = 1;
b = 2;
assert(a == b, 'Test failed')
If you want your function to do something else there may be a way to do what you want. One possibility would be to use the diagnostic input to the qualification functions/methods. But it would be difficult to give a more informative answer without more information about what you want to do.
[Forgot assert can't have an output argument when I copied and pasted the example. Removing the output.]
See Also
Categories
Find more on Testing Frameworks in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!