S - the "self" type of this assertion class. Please read "Emulating 'self types' using Java Generics to simplify fluent API implementation"
for more details.public abstract class AbstractFloatAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>> extends AbstractComparableAssert<S,Float> implements FloatingPointNumberAssert<S,Float>
Floats.actual, info, myself| Modifier | Constructor and Description |
|---|---|
protected |
AbstractFloatAssert(Float actual,
Class<?> selfType) |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
S |
isBetween(Float start,
Float end)
Verifies that the actual value is in [start, end] range (start included, end included).
|
S |
isCloseTo(float other,
Offset<Float> offset)
Verifies that the actual number is close to the given one within the given offset.
If difference is equal to offset value, assertion is considered valid. |
S |
isCloseTo(Float other,
Offset<Float> offset)
Verifies that the actual number is close to the given one within the given offset.
If difference is equal to offset value, assertion is considered valid. |
S |
isEqualTo(float expected)
Verifies that the actual value is equal to the given one.
|
S |
isEqualTo(float expected,
Offset<Float> offset)
Verifies that the actual value is close to the given one by less than the given offset.
If difference is equal to offset value, assertion is considered valid. |
S |
isEqualTo(Float expected,
Offset<Float> offset)
Verifies that the actual value is close to the given one by less than the given offset.
If difference is equal to offset value, assertion is considered valid. |
S |
isGreaterThan(float other)
Verifies that the actual value is greater than the given one.
|
S |
isGreaterThanOrEqualTo(float other)
Verifies that the actual value is greater than or equal to the given one.
|
S |
isLessThan(float other)
Verifies that the actual value is less than the given one.
|
S |
isLessThanOrEqualTo(float other)
Verifies that the actual value is less than or equal to the given one.
|
S |
isNaN()
Verifies that the actual value is equal to
NaN. |
S |
isNegative()
Verifies that the actual value is negative.
|
S |
isNotEqualTo(float other)
Verifies that the actual value is not equal to the given one.
|
S |
isNotNaN()
Verifies that the actual value is not equal to
NaN. |
S |
isNotNegative()
Verifies that the actual value is non negative (positive or equal zero).
|
S |
isNotPositive()
Verifies that the actual value is non positive (negative or equal zero).
|
S |
isNotZero()
Verifies that the actual value is not equal to zero.
|
S |
isPositive()
Verifies that the actual value is positive.
|
S |
isStrictlyBetween(Float start,
Float end)
Verifies that the actual value is in ]start, end[ range (start excluded, end excluded).
|
S |
isZero()
Verifies that the actual value is equal to zero.
|
S |
usingComparator(Comparator<? super Float> customComparator)
Use given custom comparator instead of relying on actual type A equals method for incoming assertion checks.
|
S |
usingDefaultComparator()
Revert to standard comparison for incoming assertion checks.
|
inBinary, inHexadecimal, isGreaterThan, isGreaterThanOrEqualTo, isLessThan, isLessThanOrEqualToisEqualToComparingFieldByField, isEqualToComparingOnlyGivenFields, isEqualToIgnoringGivenFields, isEqualToIgnoringNullFieldsas, as, asList, asString, describedAs, describedAs, descriptionText, doesNotHave, doesNotHaveSameClassAs, equals, failure, failWithMessage, getWritableAssertionInfo, has, hashCode, hasSameClassAs, is, isEqualTo, isExactlyInstanceOf, isIn, isIn, isInstanceOf, isInstanceOfAny, isNot, isNotEqualTo, isNotExactlyInstanceOf, isNotIn, isNotIn, isNotInstanceOf, isNotInstanceOfAny, isNotNull, isNotOfAnyClassIn, isNotSameAs, isNull, isOfAnyClassIn, isSameAs, matches, matches, overridingErrorMessage, withThreadDumpOnErrorpublic S isNaN()
NaN.isNaN in interface FloatingPointNumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isNotNaN()
NaN.isNotNaN in interface FloatingPointNumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isZero()
isZero in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isNotZero()
isNotZero in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isPositive()
isPositive in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isNegative()
isNegative in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>public S isNotNegative()
isNotNegative in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>this assertion object.public S isNotPositive()
isNotPositive in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>this assertion object.public S isEqualTo(float expected)
expected - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is not equal to the given one.public S isCloseTo(float other, Offset<Float> offset)
Example:
// assertion will pass:
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(8.2f, within(0.2f));
// you can use offset if you prefer
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(8.2f, offset(0.2f));
// if difference is exactly equals to 0.1, it's ok
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(8.2f, within(0.1f));
// assertion will fail
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(8.2f, within(0.01f));
Beware that java floating point number precision might have some unexpected behavior, e.g. the assertion below fails:
// fails because 8.1f - 8.0f is evaluated to 0.10000038f in java.
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(8.0f, within(0.1f));
other - the given number to compare the actual value to.offset - the given positive offset.this assertion object.NullPointerException - if the given offset is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is not equal to the given one.public S isCloseTo(Float other, Offset<Float> offset)
Example:
// assertion will pass:
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(new Float(8.2f), within(0.2f));
// you can use offset if you prefer
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(new Float(8.2f), offset(0.2f));
// if difference is exactly equals to the offset (0.1), it's ok
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(new Float(8.2f), within(0.1f));
// assertion will fail
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(new Float(8.2f), within(0.01f));
Beware that java floating point number precision might have some unexpected behavior, e.g. the assertion below fails:
// fails because 8.1f - 8.0f is evaluated to 0.10000038f in java.
assertThat(8.1f).isCloseTo(new Float(8.0f), within(0.1f));
isCloseTo in interface FloatingPointNumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>isCloseTo in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>other - the given number to compare the actual value to.offset - the given positive offset.this assertion object.NullPointerException - if the given offset is null.NullPointerException - if the other number is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is not equal to the given one.public S isEqualTo(Float expected, Offset<Float> offset)
Example:
// assertion will pass
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(new Float(8.2f), offset(0.2f));
// if difference is exactly equals to the offset (0.1f), it's ok
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(new Float(8.2f), offset(0.1f));
// within is an alias of offset
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(new Float(8.2f), within(0.1f));
// assertion will fail
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(new Float(8.2f), offset(0.01f));
Beware that java floating point number precision might have some unexpected behavior, e.g. the assertion below fails:
// fails because 8.1f - 8.0f is evaluated to 0.10000038f in java.
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(new Float(8.0f), offset(0.1f));
isEqualTo in interface FloatingPointNumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>expected - the given value to compare the actual value to.offset - the given positive offset.this assertion object.NullPointerException - if the given offset is null.NullPointerException - if the expected number is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is not equal to the given one.public S isEqualTo(float expected, Offset<Float> offset)
Example:
// assertion will pass
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(8.2f, offset(0.1f));
// within is an alias of offset
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(8.2f, within(0.1f));
// assertion will fail
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(8.2f, offset(0.01f));
Beware that java floating point number precision might have some unexpected behavior, e.g. the assertion below fails:
// fails because 8.1f - 8.0f is evaluated to 0.10000038f in java.
assertThat(8.1f).isEqualTo(8.0f, offset(0.1f));
expected - the given value to compare the actual value to.offset - the given positive offset.this assertion object.NullPointerException - if the given offset is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is not equal to the given one.public S isNotEqualTo(float other)
other - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is equal to the given one.public S isLessThan(float other)
other - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is equal to or greater than the given one.public S isLessThanOrEqualTo(float other)
other - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is greater than the given one.public S isGreaterThan(float other)
other - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is equal to or less than the given one.public S isGreaterThanOrEqualTo(float other)
other - the given value to compare the actual value to.this assertion object.AssertionError - if the actual value is null.AssertionError - if the actual value is less than the given one.public S isBetween(Float start, Float end)
// these assertions succeed ...
assertThat(12).isBetween(10, 14);
assertThat(12).isBetween(12, 14);
assertThat(12).isBetween(10, 12);
// ... but these one fails
assertThat(12).isBetween(14, 16);
isBetween in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>start - the start value (inclusive), expected not to be null.end - the end value (inclusive), expected not to be null.public S isStrictlyBetween(Float start, Float end)
// this assertion succeeds ...
assertThat(12).isBetween(10, 14);
// ... but these one fails
assertThat(12).isBetween(12, 14);
assertThat(12).isBetween(10, 12);
assertThat(12).isBetween(16, 18);
isStrictlyBetween in interface NumberAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>start - the start value (exclusive), expected not to be null.end - the end value (exclusive), expected not to be null.public S usingComparator(Comparator<? super Float> customComparator)
AbstractAssertCustom comparator is bound to assertion instance, meaning that if a new assertion is created, it will use default comparison strategy.
Examples :
// frodo and sam are instances of Character with Hobbit race (obviously :).
// raceComparator implements Comparator<Character>
assertThat(frodo).usingComparator(raceComparator).isEqualTo(sam);
usingComparator in interface Assert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>usingComparator in class AbstractComparableAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>customComparator - the comparator to use for incoming assertion checks.this assertion object.public S usingDefaultComparator()
AbstractAssert
This method should be used to disable a custom comparison strategy set by calling Assert.usingComparator(Comparator).
usingDefaultComparator in interface Assert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>usingDefaultComparator in class AbstractComparableAssert<S extends AbstractFloatAssert<S>,Float>this assertion object.Copyright © 2014-2015 AssertJ. All Rights Reserved.