NAME
Test::NiceDump - let's have a nice and human readable dump of our objects!
VERSION
version 1.0.1
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Deep;
use Test::NiceDump 'nice_explain';
cmp_deeply($got,$expected,'it works')
or nice_explain($got,$expected);
DESCRIPTION
This module uses Data::Dump::Filtered
and a set of sensible filters to dump test data in a more readable way.
For example, DateTime
objects get printed in the full ISO 8601 format, and DBIx::Class::Row
objects get printed as hashes of their inflated columns.
FUNCTIONS
nice_dump
my $dumped_string = nice_dump $data;
Serialise $data
in a nice, readable way.
nice_explain
nice_explain $data;
nice_explain $data, $comparator;
Calls "nice_dump
" on $data
and $comparator
(if provided), and uses diag
to provide test failure feedback with the dumped strings.
HOW TO ADD FILTERS
If the built-in filtering of input data is not enough for you, you can add extra filters. A filter is a coderef that takes a single argument (the value to be dumped), and returns either:
- nothing at all
-
to signal that it won't handle this particular value
- any single value
-
which will be dumped instead
Let's say you have a class My::Class
, and you don't want its instances to be dumped directly (maybe they contain cached data that's not very useful to see). That class may have a as_data_for_log
method that returns only the important bits of data (as a hashref, probably), so you want the return value of that method to be dumped instead. You could say:
use Safe::Isa;
Test::NiceDump::add_filter(
my_filter => sub {
$_[0]->$_isa('My::Class')
? $_[0]->as_data_for_log
: ();
},
);
or, if you want to do the same for any object with that method:
use Safe::Isa;
Test::NiceDump::add_filter(
my_filter => sub { $_[0]->$_call_if_can('as_data_for_log') },
);
add_filter
Test::NiceDump::add_filter($name => $code);
Adds a new filter. Adding a filter with an existing name overrides it.
Filters are invoked in cmp
order of name. The names of all built-in filters match /^Test::NiceDump::/
.
Try to be specific with your checks, to avoid surprises due to the interaction of different filters.
Your filter must return nothing at all if it didn't handle the value. Failure to do so will probably lead to infinite recursion.
remove_filter
Test::NiceDump::remove_filter($name);
Removes the filter with the given name. Nothing happens if such a filter does not exist.
AUTHOR
Gianni Ceccarelli <gianni.ceccarelli@broadbean.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2019 by BroadBean UK, a CareerBuilder Company.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.