gmock-generated-matchers.h.pump 21.4 KB
Newer Older
1
$$ -*- mode: c++; -*-
Gennadiy Civil's avatar
 
Gennadiy Civil committed
2
3
$$ This is a Pump source file. Please use Pump to convert
$$ it to gmock-generated-matchers.h.
4
5
$$
$var n = 10  $$ The maximum arity we support.
6
$$ }} This line fixes auto-indentation of the following code in Emacs.
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
// Copyright 2008, Google Inc.
// All rights reserved.
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
//     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
//     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
// distribution.
//     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
// this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

// Google Mock - a framework for writing C++ mock classes.
//
// This file implements some commonly used variadic matchers.

Gennadiy Civil's avatar
 
Gennadiy Civil committed
40
41
// GOOGLETEST_CM0002 DO NOT DELETE

42
43
44
#ifndef GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_
#define GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_

45
#include <iterator>
46
47
48
#include <sstream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
49
#include "gmock/gmock-matchers.h"
50
51
52
53

namespace testing {
namespace internal {

54
55
56
57
$range i 0..n-1

// The type of the i-th (0-based) field of Tuple.
#define GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, i) \
58
    typename ::testing::tuple_element<i, Tuple>::type
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77

// TupleFields<Tuple, k0, ..., kn> is for selecting fields from a
// tuple of type Tuple.  It has two members:
//
//   type: a tuple type whose i-th field is the ki-th field of Tuple.
//   GetSelectedFields(t): returns fields k0, ..., and kn of t as a tuple.
//
// For example, in class TupleFields<tuple<bool, char, int>, 2, 0>, we have:
//
//   type is tuple<int, bool>, and
//   GetSelectedFields(make_tuple(true, 'a', 42)) is (42, true).

template <class Tuple$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]>
class TupleFields;

// This generic version is used when there are $n selectors.
template <class Tuple$for i [[, int k$i]]>
class TupleFields {
 public:
78
  typedef ::testing::tuple<$for i, [[GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, k$i)]]> type;
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
  static type GetSelectedFields(const Tuple& t) {
    return type($for i, [[get<k$i>(t)]]);
  }
};

// The following specialization is used for 0 ~ $(n-1) selectors.

$for i [[
$$ }}}
$range j 0..i-1
$range k 0..n-1

template <class Tuple$for j [[, int k$j]]>
class TupleFields<Tuple, $for k, [[$if k < i [[k$k]] $else [[-1]]]]> {
 public:
94
  typedef ::testing::tuple<$for j, [[GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, k$j)]]> type;
95
  static type GetSelectedFields(const Tuple& $if i==0 [[/* t */]] $else [[t]]) {
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
    return type($for j, [[get<k$j>(t)]]);
  }
};

]]

#undef GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_

// Implements the Args() matcher.

$var ks = [[$for i, [[k$i]]]]
template <class ArgsTuple$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]>
class ArgsMatcherImpl : public MatcherInterface<ArgsTuple> {
 public:
  // ArgsTuple may have top-level const or reference modifiers.
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
111
  typedef GTEST_REMOVE_REFERENCE_AND_CONST_(ArgsTuple) RawArgsTuple;
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
  typedef typename internal::TupleFields<RawArgsTuple, $ks>::type SelectedArgs;
  typedef Matcher<const SelectedArgs&> MonomorphicInnerMatcher;

  template <typename InnerMatcher>
  explicit ArgsMatcherImpl(const InnerMatcher& inner_matcher)
      : inner_matcher_(SafeMatcherCast<const SelectedArgs&>(inner_matcher)) {}

zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
119
120
  virtual bool MatchAndExplain(ArgsTuple args,
                               MatchResultListener* listener) const {
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
    const SelectedArgs& selected_args = GetSelectedArgs(args);
    if (!listener->IsInterested())
      return inner_matcher_.Matches(selected_args);

    PrintIndices(listener->stream());
    *listener << "are " << PrintToString(selected_args);

    StringMatchResultListener inner_listener;
    const bool match = inner_matcher_.MatchAndExplain(selected_args,
                                                      &inner_listener);
    PrintIfNotEmpty(inner_listener.str(), listener->stream());
    return match;
133
134
135
  }

  virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
136
    *os << "are a tuple ";
137
138
139
140
141
    PrintIndices(os);
    inner_matcher_.DescribeTo(os);
  }

  virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
142
    *os << "are a tuple ";
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
    PrintIndices(os);
    inner_matcher_.DescribeNegationTo(os);
  }

 private:
  static SelectedArgs GetSelectedArgs(ArgsTuple args) {
    return TupleFields<RawArgsTuple, $ks>::GetSelectedFields(args);
  }

  // Prints the indices of the selected fields.
  static void PrintIndices(::std::ostream* os) {
154
    *os << "whose fields (";
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
    const int indices[$n] = { $ks };
    for (int i = 0; i < $n; i++) {
      if (indices[i] < 0)
        break;

      if (i >= 1)
        *os << ", ";

      *os << "#" << indices[i];
    }
    *os << ") ";
  }

  const MonomorphicInnerMatcher inner_matcher_;
169
170

  GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(ArgsMatcherImpl);
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
};

template <class InnerMatcher$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]>
class ArgsMatcher {
 public:
  explicit ArgsMatcher(const InnerMatcher& inner_matcher)
      : inner_matcher_(inner_matcher) {}

  template <typename ArgsTuple>
  operator Matcher<ArgsTuple>() const {
    return MakeMatcher(new ArgsMatcherImpl<ArgsTuple, $ks>(inner_matcher_));
  }

184
 private:
185
  const InnerMatcher inner_matcher_;
186
187

  GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(ArgsMatcher);
188
189
};

190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
// A set of metafunctions for computing the result type of AllOf.
// AllOf(m1, ..., mN) returns
// AllOfResultN<decltype(m1), ..., decltype(mN)>::type.

// Although AllOf isn't defined for one argument, AllOfResult1 is defined
// to simplify the implementation.
template <typename M1>
struct AllOfResult1 {
  typedef M1 type;
};

$range i 1..n

$range i 2..n
$for i [[
$range j 2..i
$var m = i/2
$range k 1..m
$range t m+1..i

template <typename M1$for j [[, typename M$j]]>
struct AllOfResult$i {
  typedef BothOfMatcher<
      typename AllOfResult$m<$for k, [[M$k]]>::type,
      typename AllOfResult$(i-m)<$for t, [[M$t]]>::type
  > type;
};

]]

// A set of metafunctions for computing the result type of AnyOf.
// AnyOf(m1, ..., mN) returns
// AnyOfResultN<decltype(m1), ..., decltype(mN)>::type.

// Although AnyOf isn't defined for one argument, AnyOfResult1 is defined
// to simplify the implementation.
template <typename M1>
struct AnyOfResult1 {
  typedef M1 type;
};

$range i 1..n

$range i 2..n
$for i [[
$range j 2..i
$var m = i/2
$range k 1..m
$range t m+1..i

template <typename M1$for j [[, typename M$j]]>
struct AnyOfResult$i {
  typedef EitherOfMatcher<
      typename AnyOfResult$m<$for k, [[M$k]]>::type,
      typename AnyOfResult$(i-m)<$for t, [[M$t]]>::type
  > type;
};

]]

250
251
}  // namespace internal

252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
// Args<N1, N2, ..., Nk>(a_matcher) matches a tuple if the selected
// fields of it matches a_matcher.  C++ doesn't support default
// arguments for function templates, so we have to overload it.

$range i 0..n
$for i [[
$range j 1..i
template <$for j [[int k$j, ]]typename InnerMatcher>
inline internal::ArgsMatcher<InnerMatcher$for j [[, k$j]]>
Args(const InnerMatcher& matcher) {
  return internal::ArgsMatcher<InnerMatcher$for j [[, k$j]]>(matcher);
}


]]
267
268
// ElementsAre(e_1, e_2, ... e_n) matches an STL-style container with
// n elements, where the i-th element in the container must
269
270
271
272
// match the i-th argument in the list.  Each argument of
// ElementsAre() can be either a value or a matcher.  We support up to
// $n arguments.
//
273
274
275
276
// The use of DecayArray in the implementation allows ElementsAre()
// to accept string literals, whose type is const char[N], but we
// want to treat them as const char*.
//
277
278
279
280
// NOTE: Since ElementsAre() cares about the order of the elements, it
// must not be used with containers whose elements's order is
// undefined (e.g. hash_map).

281
$range i 0..n
282
$for i [[
283

284
285
$range j 1..i

286
287
$if i>0 [[

288
template <$for j, [[typename T$j]]>
289
290
291
]]

inline internal::ElementsAreMatcher<
292
    ::testing::tuple<
293
294
295
296
$for j, [[

        typename internal::DecayArray<T$j[[]]>::type]]> >
ElementsAre($for j, [[const T$j& e$j]]) {
297
  typedef ::testing::tuple<
298
299
300
301
$for j, [[

      typename internal::DecayArray<T$j[[]]>::type]]> Args;
  return internal::ElementsAreMatcher<Args>(Args($for j, [[e$j]]));
302
303
304
305
}

]]

306
307
// UnorderedElementsAre(e_1, e_2, ..., e_n) is an ElementsAre extension
// that matches n elements in any order.  We support up to n=$n arguments.
308
309
310
//
// If you have >$n elements, consider UnorderedElementsAreArray() or
// UnorderedPointwise() instead.
311

312
313
$range i 0..n
$for i [[
314

315
316
317
$range j 1..i

$if i>0 [[
318

319
320
321
322
template <$for j, [[typename T$j]]>
]]

inline internal::UnorderedElementsAreMatcher<
323
    ::testing::tuple<
324
325
326
327
$for j, [[

        typename internal::DecayArray<T$j[[]]>::type]]> >
UnorderedElementsAre($for j, [[const T$j& e$j]]) {
328
  typedef ::testing::tuple<
329
330
331
332
$for j, [[

      typename internal::DecayArray<T$j[[]]>::type]]> Args;
  return internal::UnorderedElementsAreMatcher<Args>(Args($for j, [[e$j]]));
333
334
}

335
]]
336

337
// AllOf(m1, m2, ..., mk) matches any value that matches all of the given
338
// sub-matchers.  AllOf is called fully qualified to prevent ADL from firing.
339
340
341
342

$range i 2..n
$for i [[
$range j 1..i
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
$var m = i/2
$range k 1..m
$range t m+1..i

template <$for j, [[typename M$j]]>
inline typename internal::AllOfResult$i<$for j, [[M$j]]>::type
AllOf($for j, [[M$j m$j]]) {
  return typename internal::AllOfResult$i<$for j, [[M$j]]>::type(
      $if m == 1 [[m1]] $else [[::testing::AllOf($for k, [[m$k]])]],
      $if m+1 == i [[m$i]] $else [[::testing::AllOf($for t, [[m$t]])]]);
353
354
355
356
357
}

]]

// AnyOf(m1, m2, ..., mk) matches any value that matches any of the given
358
// sub-matchers.  AnyOf is called fully qualified to prevent ADL from firing.
359
360
361
362

$range i 2..n
$for i [[
$range j 1..i
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
$var m = i/2
$range k 1..m
$range t m+1..i

template <$for j, [[typename M$j]]>
inline typename internal::AnyOfResult$i<$for j, [[M$j]]>::type
AnyOf($for j, [[M$j m$j]]) {
  return typename internal::AnyOfResult$i<$for j, [[M$j]]>::type(
      $if m == 1 [[m1]] $else [[::testing::AnyOf($for k, [[m$k]])]],
      $if m+1 == i [[m$i]] $else [[::testing::AnyOf($for t, [[m$t]])]]);
373
374
375
376
}

]]

377
}  // namespace testing
378
379
380
$$ } // This Pump meta comment fixes auto-indentation in Emacs. It will not
$$   // show up in the generated code.

381

zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
382
// The MATCHER* family of macros can be used in a namespace scope to
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
383
384
385
386
387
388
// define custom matchers easily.
//
// Basic Usage
// ===========
//
// The syntax
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
389
390
391
//
//   MATCHER(name, description_string) { statements; }
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
392
393
394
395
// defines a matcher with the given name that executes the statements,
// which must return a bool to indicate if the match succeeds.  Inside
// the statements, you can refer to the value being matched by 'arg',
// and refer to its type by 'arg_type'.
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
//
// The description string documents what the matcher does, and is used
// to generate the failure message when the match fails.  Since a
// MATCHER() is usually defined in a header file shared by multiple
// C++ source files, we require the description to be a C-string
// literal to avoid possible side effects.  It can be empty, in which
// case we'll use the sequence of words in the matcher name as the
// description.
//
// For example:
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
//
//   MATCHER(IsEven, "") { return (arg % 2) == 0; }
//
// allows you to write
//
//   // Expects mock_foo.Bar(n) to be called where n is even.
//   EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, Bar(IsEven()));
//
// or,
//
//   // Verifies that the value of some_expression is even.
//   EXPECT_THAT(some_expression, IsEven());
//
// If the above assertion fails, it will print something like:
//
//   Value of: some_expression
//   Expected: is even
//     Actual: 7
//
// where the description "is even" is automatically calculated from the
// matcher name IsEven.
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
428
429
430
// Argument Type
// =============
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
// Note that the type of the value being matched (arg_type) is
// determined by the context in which you use the matcher and is
// supplied to you by the compiler, so you don't need to worry about
// declaring it (nor can you).  This allows the matcher to be
// polymorphic.  For example, IsEven() can be used to match any type
// where the value of "(arg % 2) == 0" can be implicitly converted to
// a bool.  In the "Bar(IsEven())" example above, if method Bar()
// takes an int, 'arg_type' will be int; if it takes an unsigned long,
// 'arg_type' will be unsigned long; and so on.
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
441
442
443
// Parameterizing Matchers
// =======================
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
// Sometimes you'll want to parameterize the matcher.  For that you
// can use another macro:
//
//   MATCHER_P(name, param_name, description_string) { statements; }
//
// For example:
//
//   MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value, "") { return abs(arg) == value; }
//
// will allow you to write:
//
//   EXPECT_THAT(Blah("a"), HasAbsoluteValue(n));
//
// which may lead to this message (assuming n is 10):
//
//   Value of: Blah("a")
//   Expected: has absolute value 10
//     Actual: -9
//
// Note that both the matcher description and its parameter are
// printed, making the message human-friendly.
//
// In the matcher definition body, you can write 'foo_type' to
// reference the type of a parameter named 'foo'.  For example, in the
// body of MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value) above, you can write
// 'value_type' to refer to the type of 'value'.
//
// We also provide MATCHER_P2, MATCHER_P3, ..., up to MATCHER_P$n to
// support multi-parameter matchers.
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
474
475
476
// Describing Parameterized Matchers
// =================================
//
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
// The last argument to MATCHER*() is a string-typed expression.  The
// expression can reference all of the matcher's parameters and a
// special bool-typed variable named 'negation'.  When 'negation' is
// false, the expression should evaluate to the matcher's description;
// otherwise it should evaluate to the description of the negation of
// the matcher.  For example,
//
//   using testing::PrintToString;
//
//   MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi,
487
//       std::string(negation ? "is not" : "is") + " in range [" +
488
//       PrintToString(low) + ", " + PrintToString(hi) + "]") {
489
490
491
492
//     return low <= arg && arg <= hi;
//   }
//   ...
//   EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6));
493
//   EXPECT_THAT(3, Not(InClosedRange(2, 4)));
494
//
495
// would generate two failures that contain the text:
496
497
//
//   Expected: is in range [4, 6]
498
499
//   ...
//   Expected: is not in range [2, 4]
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
//
// If you specify "" as the description, the failure message will
// contain the sequence of words in the matcher name followed by the
// parameter values printed as a tuple.  For example,
//
//   MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi, "") { ... }
//   ...
//   EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6));
508
//   EXPECT_THAT(3, Not(InClosedRange(2, 4)));
509
//
510
// would generate two failures that contain the text:
511
512
//
//   Expected: in closed range (4, 6)
513
514
//   ...
//   Expected: not (in closed range (2, 4))
515
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
516
517
518
// Types of Matcher Parameters
// ===========================
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
// For the purpose of typing, you can view
//
//   MATCHER_Pk(Foo, p1, ..., pk, description_string) { ... }
//
// as shorthand for
//
//   template <typename p1_type, ..., typename pk_type>
//   FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type>
//   Foo(p1_type p1, ..., pk_type pk) { ... }
//
// When you write Foo(v1, ..., vk), the compiler infers the types of
// the parameters v1, ..., and vk for you.  If you are not happy with
// the result of the type inference, you can specify the types by
// explicitly instantiating the template, as in Foo<long, bool>(5,
// false).  As said earlier, you don't get to (or need to) specify
// 'arg_type' as that's determined by the context in which the matcher
// is used.  You can assign the result of expression Foo(p1, ..., pk)
// to a variable of type FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type>.  This
// can be useful when composing matchers.
//
// While you can instantiate a matcher template with reference types,
// passing the parameters by pointer usually makes your code more
// readable.  If, however, you still want to pass a parameter by
// reference, be aware that in the failure message generated by the
// matcher you will see the value of the referenced object but not its
// address.
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
// Explaining Match Results
// ========================
//
// Sometimes the matcher description alone isn't enough to explain why
// the match has failed or succeeded.  For example, when expecting a
// long string, it can be very helpful to also print the diff between
// the expected string and the actual one.  To achieve that, you can
// optionally stream additional information to a special variable
// named result_listener, whose type is a pointer to class
// MatchResultListener:
//
//   MATCHER_P(EqualsLongString, str, "") {
//     if (arg == str) return true;
//
//     *result_listener << "the difference: "
///                     << DiffStrings(str, arg);
//     return false;
//   }
//
// Overloading Matchers
// ====================
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
568
569
570
571
572
// You can overload matchers with different numbers of parameters:
//
//   MATCHER_P(Blah, a, description_string1) { ... }
//   MATCHER_P2(Blah, a, b, description_string2) { ... }
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
573
574
// Caveats
// =======
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
575
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
// When defining a new matcher, you should also consider implementing
// MatcherInterface or using MakePolymorphicMatcher().  These
// approaches require more work than the MATCHER* macros, but also
// give you more control on the types of the value being matched and
// the matcher parameters, which may leads to better compiler error
// messages when the matcher is used wrong.  They also allow
// overloading matchers based on parameter types (as opposed to just
// based on the number of parameters).
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
//
// MATCHER*() can only be used in a namespace scope.  The reason is
// that C++ doesn't yet allow function-local types to be used to
// instantiate templates.  The up-coming C++0x standard will fix this.
// Once that's done, we'll consider supporting using MATCHER*() inside
// a function.
//
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
591
592
// More Information
// ================
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
593
594
//
// To learn more about using these macros, please search for 'MATCHER'
595
// on https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googlemock/docs/CookBook.md
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610

$range i 0..n
$for i

[[
$var macro_name = [[$if i==0 [[MATCHER]] $elif i==1 [[MATCHER_P]]
                                         $else [[MATCHER_P$i]]]]
$var class_name = [[name##Matcher[[$if i==0 [[]] $elif i==1 [[P]]
                                                 $else [[P$i]]]]]]
$range j 0..i-1
$var template = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[

  template <$for j, [[typename p$j##_type]]>\
]]]]
$var ctor_param_list = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type gmock_p$j]]]]
611
$var impl_ctor_param_list = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type gmock_p$j]]]]
612
613
$var impl_inits = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[ : $for j, [[p$j(::testing::internal::move(gmock_p$j))]]]]]]
$var inits = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[ : $for j, [[p$j(::testing::internal::move(gmock_p$j))]]]]]]
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
614
615
616
617
618
619
$var params = [[$for j, [[p$j]]]]
$var param_types = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[<$for j, [[p$j##_type]]>]]]]
$var param_types_and_names = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type p$j]]]]
$var param_field_decls = [[$for j
[[

620
      p$j##_type const p$j;\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
621
622
623
624
]]]]
$var param_field_decls2 = [[$for j
[[

625
    p$j##_type const p$j;\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
626
627
628
629
630
631
]]]]

#define $macro_name(name$for j [[, p$j]], description)\$template
  class $class_name {\
   public:\
    template <typename arg_type>\
632
633
    class gmock_Impl : public ::testing::MatcherInterface<\
        GTEST_REFERENCE_TO_CONST_(arg_type)> {\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
634
     public:\
635
636
      [[$if i==1 [[explicit ]]]]gmock_Impl($impl_ctor_param_list)\
          $impl_inits {}\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
637
      virtual bool MatchAndExplain(\
638
639
          GTEST_REFERENCE_TO_CONST_(arg_type) arg,\
          ::testing::MatchResultListener* result_listener) const;\
640
      virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* gmock_os) const {\
641
642
643
644
        *gmock_os << FormatDescription(false);\
      }\
      virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* gmock_os) const {\
        *gmock_os << FormatDescription(true);\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
645
      }\$param_field_decls
646
     private:\
647
648
649
      ::std::string FormatDescription(bool negation) const {\
        ::std::string gmock_description = (description);\
        if (!gmock_description.empty())\
650
651
          return gmock_description;\
        return ::testing::internal::FormatMatcherDescription(\
652
            negation, #name, \
653
            ::testing::internal::UniversalTersePrintTupleFieldsToStrings(\
654
                ::testing::tuple<$for j, [[p$j##_type]]>($for j, [[p$j]])));\
655
      }\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
656
657
658
    };\
    template <typename arg_type>\
    operator ::testing::Matcher<arg_type>() const {\
659
      return ::testing::Matcher<arg_type>(\
660
          new gmock_Impl<arg_type>($params));\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
661
    }\
billydonahue's avatar
billydonahue committed
662
    [[$if i==1 [[explicit ]]]]$class_name($ctor_param_list)$inits {\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
663
    }\$param_field_decls2
664
   private:\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
665
666
667
668
669
  };\$template
  inline $class_name$param_types name($param_types_and_names) {\
    return $class_name$param_types($params);\
  }\$template
  template <typename arg_type>\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
670
  bool $class_name$param_types::gmock_Impl<arg_type>::MatchAndExplain(\
671
      GTEST_REFERENCE_TO_CONST_(arg_type) arg,\
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
672
673
      ::testing::MatchResultListener* result_listener GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_)\
          const
zhanyong.wan's avatar
zhanyong.wan committed
674
675
676
]]


677
#endif  // GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_