This exercise will cover the custom equality comparers included in Unity Test Framework, such as Vector3EqualityComparer
. These are used to assert on e.g. Vectors.
We have extended the assertion capabilities of NUnit with some custom comparisons for Unity-specific objects. A good example of this is the ability to compare two Vector3
objects.
An example of its use is:
actual = new Vector3(0.01f, 0.01f, 0f);
expected = new Vector3(0.01f, 0.01f, 0f);
Assert.That(actual, Is.EqualTo(expected).Using(Vector3EqualityComparer.Instance));
This allows us to verify that the two vectors are identical within a given tolerence. By default the tolerance is 0.0001f. The tolerance can be changed by providing a new Vector3EqualityComparer
, instead of using the default in .instance. For example you can up the tolerance to 0.01f with the following:
Assert.That(actual, Is.EqualTo(expected).Using(new Vector3EqualityComparer(0.01f));
For a list of all available custom comparers, see Custom equality comparers.
Similar to the project for exercise 3, the sample 4_CustomComparison
contains a ValueOutputter
class.
Verify that the ValueOutputter
returns the correct values from its methods:
GetVector3()
should return a Vector3
that is roughly equal to (10.333, 3, 9.666).
GetFloat()
should return a float
that is roughly 19.333. This is the same as previous exercise, but you can try to solve this with a FloatEqualityComparer
.
GetQuaternion
should return a Quaternion object that should be roughly equal to (10f, 0f, 7.33333f, 0f).
ToString
on Vector3
rounds the value off before displaying it, the two values in the string message might be equal, even when their Vector3
values are not.The full solution is available in the sample 4_CustomComparison_Solution
.
[Test]
public void Vector3ReturnsCorrectValue()
{
var valueOutputterUnderTest = new ValueOutputter();
var vector3 = valueOutputterUnderTest.GetVector3();
var expected = new Vector3(10.333f, 3f, 9.666f);
Assert.That(vector3, Is.EqualTo(expected).Using(new Vector3EqualityComparer(0.001f)));
}
[Test]
public void FloatReturnsCorrectValue()
{
var valueOutputterUnderTest = new ValueOutputter();
var actualFloat = valueOutputterUnderTest.GetFloat();
Assert.That(actualFloat, Is.EqualTo(19.333f).Using(new FloatEqualityComparer(0.001f)));
}
[Test]
public void QuaternionReturnsCorrectValue()
{
var valueOutputterUnderTest = new ValueOutputter();
var actualValue = valueOutputterUnderTest.GetQuaternion();
var expectedValue = new Quaternion(10f, 0f, 7.33333f, 0f);
Assert.That(actualValue, Is.EqualTo(expectedValue).Using(new QuaternionEqualityComparer(0.001f)));
}