NAME

Test2::Tools::Class - Test2 implementation of the tools for testing classes.

DESCRIPTION

Test2 based tools for validating classes and objects. These are similar to some tools from Test::More, but they have a more consistent interface.

SYNOPSIS

use Test2::Tools::Class;

isa_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, $PARENT_CLASS1, $PARENT_CLASS2, ...);
isa_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, [$PARENT_CLASS1, $PARENT_CLASS2, ...], "Test Name");

can_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, $METHOD1, $METHOD2, ...);
can_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, [$METHOD1, $METHOD2, ...], "Test Name");

DOES_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, $ROLE1, $ROLE2, ...);
DOES_ok($CLASS_OR_INSTANCE, [$ROLE1, $ROLE2, ...], "Test Name");

EXPORTS

All subs are exported by default.

can_ok($thing, @methods)
can_ok($thing, \@methods, $test_name)

This checks that $thing (either a class name, or a blessed instance) has the specified methods.

If the second argument is an arrayref then it will be used as the list of methods leaving the third argument to be the test name.

isa_ok($thing, @classes)
isa_ok($thing, \@classes, $test_name)

This checks that $thing (either a class name, or a blessed instance) is or subclasses the specified classes.

If the second argument is an arrayref then it will be used as the list of classes leaving the third argument to be the test name.

DOES_ok($thing, @roles)
DOES_ok($thing, \@roles, $test_name)

This checks that $thing (either a class name, or a blessed instance) does the specified roles.

If the second argument is an arrayref then it will be used as the list of roles leaving the third argument to be the test name.

Note 1: This uses the $class->DOES(...) method, not the does() method Moose provides.

Note 2: Not all perls have the DOES() method, if you use this on those perls the test will be skipped.

SOURCE

The source code repository for Test2-Suite can be found at https://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.

MAINTAINERS

Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>

AUTHORS

Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/