source: gtest-1.7.0/include/gtest/gtest-printers.h@ 12761

Last change on this file since 12761 was 12746, checked in by hock@…, 11 years ago

integrated the Google Testing Framework (gtest)

and wrote an Hello World test, to ensure the framework is working..

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7//
8// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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17//
18// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
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27// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
28// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
29//
30// Author: wan@google.com (Zhanyong Wan)
31
32// Google Test - The Google C++ Testing Framework
33//
34// This file implements a universal value printer that can print a
35// value of any type T:
36//
37// void ::testing::internal::UniversalPrinter<T>::Print(value, ostream_ptr);
38//
39// A user can teach this function how to print a class type T by
40// defining either operator<<() or PrintTo() in the namespace that
41// defines T. More specifically, the FIRST defined function in the
42// following list will be used (assuming T is defined in namespace
43// foo):
44//
45// 1. foo::PrintTo(const T&, ostream*)
46// 2. operator<<(ostream&, const T&) defined in either foo or the
47// global namespace.
48//
49// If none of the above is defined, it will print the debug string of
50// the value if it is a protocol buffer, or print the raw bytes in the
51// value otherwise.
52//
53// To aid debugging: when T is a reference type, the address of the
54// value is also printed; when T is a (const) char pointer, both the
55// pointer value and the NUL-terminated string it points to are
56// printed.
57//
58// We also provide some convenient wrappers:
59//
60// // Prints a value to a string. For a (const or not) char
61// // pointer, the NUL-terminated string (but not the pointer) is
62// // printed.
63// std::string ::testing::PrintToString(const T& value);
64//
65// // Prints a value tersely: for a reference type, the referenced
66// // value (but not the address) is printed; for a (const or not) char
67// // pointer, the NUL-terminated string (but not the pointer) is
68// // printed.
69// void ::testing::internal::UniversalTersePrint(const T& value, ostream*);
70//
71// // Prints value using the type inferred by the compiler. The difference
72// // from UniversalTersePrint() is that this function prints both the
73// // pointer and the NUL-terminated string for a (const or not) char pointer.
74// void ::testing::internal::UniversalPrint(const T& value, ostream*);
75//
76// // Prints the fields of a tuple tersely to a string vector, one
77// // element for each field. Tuple support must be enabled in
78// // gtest-port.h.
79// std::vector<string> UniversalTersePrintTupleFieldsToStrings(
80// const Tuple& value);
81//
82// Known limitation:
83//
84// The print primitives print the elements of an STL-style container
85// using the compiler-inferred type of *iter where iter is a
86// const_iterator of the container. When const_iterator is an input
87// iterator but not a forward iterator, this inferred type may not
88// match value_type, and the print output may be incorrect. In
89// practice, this is rarely a problem as for most containers
90// const_iterator is a forward iterator. We'll fix this if there's an
91// actual need for it. Note that this fix cannot rely on value_type
92// being defined as many user-defined container types don't have
93// value_type.
94
95#ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_PRINTERS_H_
96#define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_PRINTERS_H_
97
98#include <ostream> // NOLINT
99#include <sstream>
100#include <string>
101#include <utility>
102#include <vector>
103#include "gtest/internal/gtest-port.h"
104#include "gtest/internal/gtest-internal.h"
105
106namespace testing {
107
108// Definitions in the 'internal' and 'internal2' name spaces are
109// subject to change without notice. DO NOT USE THEM IN USER CODE!
110namespace internal2 {
111
112// Prints the given number of bytes in the given object to the given
113// ostream.
114GTEST_API_ void PrintBytesInObjectTo(const unsigned char* obj_bytes,
115 size_t count,
116 ::std::ostream* os);
117
118// For selecting which printer to use when a given type has neither <<
119// nor PrintTo().
120enum TypeKind {
121 kProtobuf, // a protobuf type
122 kConvertibleToInteger, // a type implicitly convertible to BiggestInt
123 // (e.g. a named or unnamed enum type)
124 kOtherType // anything else
125};
126
127// TypeWithoutFormatter<T, kTypeKind>::PrintValue(value, os) is called
128// by the universal printer to print a value of type T when neither
129// operator<< nor PrintTo() is defined for T, where kTypeKind is the
130// "kind" of T as defined by enum TypeKind.
131template <typename T, TypeKind kTypeKind>
132class TypeWithoutFormatter {
133 public:
134 // This default version is called when kTypeKind is kOtherType.
135 static void PrintValue(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
136 PrintBytesInObjectTo(reinterpret_cast<const unsigned char*>(&value),
137 sizeof(value), os);
138 }
139};
140
141// We print a protobuf using its ShortDebugString() when the string
142// doesn't exceed this many characters; otherwise we print it using
143// DebugString() for better readability.
144const size_t kProtobufOneLinerMaxLength = 50;
145
146template <typename T>
147class TypeWithoutFormatter<T, kProtobuf> {
148 public:
149 static void PrintValue(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
150 const ::testing::internal::string short_str = value.ShortDebugString();
151 const ::testing::internal::string pretty_str =
152 short_str.length() <= kProtobufOneLinerMaxLength ?
153 short_str : ("\n" + value.DebugString());
154 *os << ("<" + pretty_str + ">");
155 }
156};
157
158template <typename T>
159class TypeWithoutFormatter<T, kConvertibleToInteger> {
160 public:
161 // Since T has no << operator or PrintTo() but can be implicitly
162 // converted to BiggestInt, we print it as a BiggestInt.
163 //
164 // Most likely T is an enum type (either named or unnamed), in which
165 // case printing it as an integer is the desired behavior. In case
166 // T is not an enum, printing it as an integer is the best we can do
167 // given that it has no user-defined printer.
168 static void PrintValue(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
169 const internal::BiggestInt kBigInt = value;
170 *os << kBigInt;
171 }
172};
173
174// Prints the given value to the given ostream. If the value is a
175// protocol message, its debug string is printed; if it's an enum or
176// of a type implicitly convertible to BiggestInt, it's printed as an
177// integer; otherwise the bytes in the value are printed. This is
178// what UniversalPrinter<T>::Print() does when it knows nothing about
179// type T and T has neither << operator nor PrintTo().
180//
181// A user can override this behavior for a class type Foo by defining
182// a << operator in the namespace where Foo is defined.
183//
184// We put this operator in namespace 'internal2' instead of 'internal'
185// to simplify the implementation, as much code in 'internal' needs to
186// use << in STL, which would conflict with our own << were it defined
187// in 'internal'.
188//
189// Note that this operator<< takes a generic std::basic_ostream<Char,
190// CharTraits> type instead of the more restricted std::ostream. If
191// we define it to take an std::ostream instead, we'll get an
192// "ambiguous overloads" compiler error when trying to print a type
193// Foo that supports streaming to std::basic_ostream<Char,
194// CharTraits>, as the compiler cannot tell whether
195// operator<<(std::ostream&, const T&) or
196// operator<<(std::basic_stream<Char, CharTraits>, const Foo&) is more
197// specific.
198template <typename Char, typename CharTraits, typename T>
199::std::basic_ostream<Char, CharTraits>& operator<<(
200 ::std::basic_ostream<Char, CharTraits>& os, const T& x) {
201 TypeWithoutFormatter<T,
202 (internal::IsAProtocolMessage<T>::value ? kProtobuf :
203 internal::ImplicitlyConvertible<const T&, internal::BiggestInt>::value ?
204 kConvertibleToInteger : kOtherType)>::PrintValue(x, &os);
205 return os;
206}
207
208} // namespace internal2
209} // namespace testing
210
211// This namespace MUST NOT BE NESTED IN ::testing, or the name look-up
212// magic needed for implementing UniversalPrinter won't work.
213namespace testing_internal {
214
215// Used to print a value that is not an STL-style container when the
216// user doesn't define PrintTo() for it.
217template <typename T>
218void DefaultPrintNonContainerTo(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
219 // With the following statement, during unqualified name lookup,
220 // testing::internal2::operator<< appears as if it was declared in
221 // the nearest enclosing namespace that contains both
222 // ::testing_internal and ::testing::internal2, i.e. the global
223 // namespace. For more details, refer to the C++ Standard section
224 // 7.3.4-1 [namespace.udir]. This allows us to fall back onto
225 // testing::internal2::operator<< in case T doesn't come with a <<
226 // operator.
227 //
228 // We cannot write 'using ::testing::internal2::operator<<;', which
229 // gcc 3.3 fails to compile due to a compiler bug.
230 using namespace ::testing::internal2; // NOLINT
231
232 // Assuming T is defined in namespace foo, in the next statement,
233 // the compiler will consider all of:
234 //
235 // 1. foo::operator<< (thanks to Koenig look-up),
236 // 2. ::operator<< (as the current namespace is enclosed in ::),
237 // 3. testing::internal2::operator<< (thanks to the using statement above).
238 //
239 // The operator<< whose type matches T best will be picked.
240 //
241 // We deliberately allow #2 to be a candidate, as sometimes it's
242 // impossible to define #1 (e.g. when foo is ::std, defining
243 // anything in it is undefined behavior unless you are a compiler
244 // vendor.).
245 *os << value;
246}
247
248} // namespace testing_internal
249
250namespace testing {
251namespace internal {
252
253// UniversalPrinter<T>::Print(value, ostream_ptr) prints the given
254// value to the given ostream. The caller must ensure that
255// 'ostream_ptr' is not NULL, or the behavior is undefined.
256//
257// We define UniversalPrinter as a class template (as opposed to a
258// function template), as we need to partially specialize it for
259// reference types, which cannot be done with function templates.
260template <typename T>
261class UniversalPrinter;
262
263template <typename T>
264void UniversalPrint(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os);
265
266// Used to print an STL-style container when the user doesn't define
267// a PrintTo() for it.
268template <typename C>
269void DefaultPrintTo(IsContainer /* dummy */,
270 false_type /* is not a pointer */,
271 const C& container, ::std::ostream* os) {
272 const size_t kMaxCount = 32; // The maximum number of elements to print.
273 *os << '{';
274 size_t count = 0;
275 for (typename C::const_iterator it = container.begin();
276 it != container.end(); ++it, ++count) {
277 if (count > 0) {
278 *os << ',';
279 if (count == kMaxCount) { // Enough has been printed.
280 *os << " ...";
281 break;
282 }
283 }
284 *os << ' ';
285 // We cannot call PrintTo(*it, os) here as PrintTo() doesn't
286 // handle *it being a native array.
287 internal::UniversalPrint(*it, os);
288 }
289
290 if (count > 0) {
291 *os << ' ';
292 }
293 *os << '}';
294}
295
296// Used to print a pointer that is neither a char pointer nor a member
297// pointer, when the user doesn't define PrintTo() for it. (A member
298// variable pointer or member function pointer doesn't really point to
299// a location in the address space. Their representation is
300// implementation-defined. Therefore they will be printed as raw
301// bytes.)
302template <typename T>
303void DefaultPrintTo(IsNotContainer /* dummy */,
304 true_type /* is a pointer */,
305 T* p, ::std::ostream* os) {
306 if (p == NULL) {
307 *os << "NULL";
308 } else {
309 // C++ doesn't allow casting from a function pointer to any object
310 // pointer.
311 //
312 // IsTrue() silences warnings: "Condition is always true",
313 // "unreachable code".
314 if (IsTrue(ImplicitlyConvertible<T*, const void*>::value)) {
315 // T is not a function type. We just call << to print p,
316 // relying on ADL to pick up user-defined << for their pointer
317 // types, if any.
318 *os << p;
319 } else {
320 // T is a function type, so '*os << p' doesn't do what we want
321 // (it just prints p as bool). We want to print p as a const
322 // void*. However, we cannot cast it to const void* directly,
323 // even using reinterpret_cast, as earlier versions of gcc
324 // (e.g. 3.4.5) cannot compile the cast when p is a function
325 // pointer. Casting to UInt64 first solves the problem.
326 *os << reinterpret_cast<const void*>(
327 reinterpret_cast<internal::UInt64>(p));
328 }
329 }
330}
331
332// Used to print a non-container, non-pointer value when the user
333// doesn't define PrintTo() for it.
334template <typename T>
335void DefaultPrintTo(IsNotContainer /* dummy */,
336 false_type /* is not a pointer */,
337 const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
338 ::testing_internal::DefaultPrintNonContainerTo(value, os);
339}
340
341// Prints the given value using the << operator if it has one;
342// otherwise prints the bytes in it. This is what
343// UniversalPrinter<T>::Print() does when PrintTo() is not specialized
344// or overloaded for type T.
345//
346// A user can override this behavior for a class type Foo by defining
347// an overload of PrintTo() in the namespace where Foo is defined. We
348// give the user this option as sometimes defining a << operator for
349// Foo is not desirable (e.g. the coding style may prevent doing it,
350// or there is already a << operator but it doesn't do what the user
351// wants).
352template <typename T>
353void PrintTo(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
354 // DefaultPrintTo() is overloaded. The type of its first two
355 // arguments determine which version will be picked. If T is an
356 // STL-style container, the version for container will be called; if
357 // T is a pointer, the pointer version will be called; otherwise the
358 // generic version will be called.
359 //
360 // Note that we check for container types here, prior to we check
361 // for protocol message types in our operator<<. The rationale is:
362 //
363 // For protocol messages, we want to give people a chance to
364 // override Google Mock's format by defining a PrintTo() or
365 // operator<<. For STL containers, other formats can be
366 // incompatible with Google Mock's format for the container
367 // elements; therefore we check for container types here to ensure
368 // that our format is used.
369 //
370 // The second argument of DefaultPrintTo() is needed to bypass a bug
371 // in Symbian's C++ compiler that prevents it from picking the right
372 // overload between:
373 //
374 // PrintTo(const T& x, ...);
375 // PrintTo(T* x, ...);
376 DefaultPrintTo(IsContainerTest<T>(0), is_pointer<T>(), value, os);
377}
378
379// The following list of PrintTo() overloads tells
380// UniversalPrinter<T>::Print() how to print standard types (built-in
381// types, strings, plain arrays, and pointers).
382
383// Overloads for various char types.
384GTEST_API_ void PrintTo(unsigned char c, ::std::ostream* os);
385GTEST_API_ void PrintTo(signed char c, ::std::ostream* os);
386inline void PrintTo(char c, ::std::ostream* os) {
387 // When printing a plain char, we always treat it as unsigned. This
388 // way, the output won't be affected by whether the compiler thinks
389 // char is signed or not.
390 PrintTo(static_cast<unsigned char>(c), os);
391}
392
393// Overloads for other simple built-in types.
394inline void PrintTo(bool x, ::std::ostream* os) {
395 *os << (x ? "true" : "false");
396}
397
398// Overload for wchar_t type.
399// Prints a wchar_t as a symbol if it is printable or as its internal
400// code otherwise and also as its decimal code (except for L'\0').
401// The L'\0' char is printed as "L'\\0'". The decimal code is printed
402// as signed integer when wchar_t is implemented by the compiler
403// as a signed type and is printed as an unsigned integer when wchar_t
404// is implemented as an unsigned type.
405GTEST_API_ void PrintTo(wchar_t wc, ::std::ostream* os);
406
407// Overloads for C strings.
408GTEST_API_ void PrintTo(const char* s, ::std::ostream* os);
409inline void PrintTo(char* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
410 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const char*>(s), os);
411}
412
413// signed/unsigned char is often used for representing binary data, so
414// we print pointers to it as void* to be safe.
415inline void PrintTo(const signed char* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
416 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const void*>(s), os);
417}
418inline void PrintTo(signed char* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
419 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const void*>(s), os);
420}
421inline void PrintTo(const unsigned char* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
422 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const void*>(s), os);
423}
424inline void PrintTo(unsigned char* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
425 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const void*>(s), os);
426}
427
428// MSVC can be configured to define wchar_t as a typedef of unsigned
429// short. It defines _NATIVE_WCHAR_T_DEFINED when wchar_t is a native
430// type. When wchar_t is a typedef, defining an overload for const
431// wchar_t* would cause unsigned short* be printed as a wide string,
432// possibly causing invalid memory accesses.
433#if !defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(_NATIVE_WCHAR_T_DEFINED)
434// Overloads for wide C strings
435GTEST_API_ void PrintTo(const wchar_t* s, ::std::ostream* os);
436inline void PrintTo(wchar_t* s, ::std::ostream* os) {
437 PrintTo(ImplicitCast_<const wchar_t*>(s), os);
438}
439#endif
440
441// Overload for C arrays. Multi-dimensional arrays are printed
442// properly.
443
444// Prints the given number of elements in an array, without printing
445// the curly braces.
446template <typename T>
447void PrintRawArrayTo(const T a[], size_t count, ::std::ostream* os) {
448 UniversalPrint(a[0], os);
449 for (size_t i = 1; i != count; i++) {
450 *os << ", ";
451 UniversalPrint(a[i], os);
452 }
453}
454
455// Overloads for ::string and ::std::string.
456#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
457GTEST_API_ void PrintStringTo(const ::string&s, ::std::ostream* os);
458inline void PrintTo(const ::string& s, ::std::ostream* os) {
459 PrintStringTo(s, os);
460}
461#endif // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
462
463GTEST_API_ void PrintStringTo(const ::std::string&s, ::std::ostream* os);
464inline void PrintTo(const ::std::string& s, ::std::ostream* os) {
465 PrintStringTo(s, os);
466}
467
468// Overloads for ::wstring and ::std::wstring.
469#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
470GTEST_API_ void PrintWideStringTo(const ::wstring&s, ::std::ostream* os);
471inline void PrintTo(const ::wstring& s, ::std::ostream* os) {
472 PrintWideStringTo(s, os);
473}
474#endif // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
475
476#if GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
477GTEST_API_ void PrintWideStringTo(const ::std::wstring&s, ::std::ostream* os);
478inline void PrintTo(const ::std::wstring& s, ::std::ostream* os) {
479 PrintWideStringTo(s, os);
480}
481#endif // GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
482
483#if GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
484// Overload for ::std::tr1::tuple. Needed for printing function arguments,
485// which are packed as tuples.
486
487// Helper function for printing a tuple. T must be instantiated with
488// a tuple type.
489template <typename T>
490void PrintTupleTo(const T& t, ::std::ostream* os);
491
492// Overloaded PrintTo() for tuples of various arities. We support
493// tuples of up-to 10 fields. The following implementation works
494// regardless of whether tr1::tuple is implemented using the
495// non-standard variadic template feature or not.
496
497inline void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<>& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
498 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
499}
500
501template <typename T1>
502void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1>& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
503 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
504}
505
506template <typename T1, typename T2>
507void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2>& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
508 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
509}
510
511template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3>
512void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3>& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
513 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
514}
515
516template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4>
517void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4>& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
518 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
519}
520
521template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5>
522void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5>& t,
523 ::std::ostream* os) {
524 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
525}
526
527template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5,
528 typename T6>
529void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6>& t,
530 ::std::ostream* os) {
531 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
532}
533
534template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5,
535 typename T6, typename T7>
536void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7>& t,
537 ::std::ostream* os) {
538 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
539}
540
541template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5,
542 typename T6, typename T7, typename T8>
543void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, T8>& t,
544 ::std::ostream* os) {
545 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
546}
547
548template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5,
549 typename T6, typename T7, typename T8, typename T9>
550void PrintTo(const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, T8, T9>& t,
551 ::std::ostream* os) {
552 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
553}
554
555template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3, typename T4, typename T5,
556 typename T6, typename T7, typename T8, typename T9, typename T10>
557void PrintTo(
558 const ::std::tr1::tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, T8, T9, T10>& t,
559 ::std::ostream* os) {
560 PrintTupleTo(t, os);
561}
562#endif // GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
563
564// Overload for std::pair.
565template <typename T1, typename T2>
566void PrintTo(const ::std::pair<T1, T2>& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
567 *os << '(';
568 // We cannot use UniversalPrint(value.first, os) here, as T1 may be
569 // a reference type. The same for printing value.second.
570 UniversalPrinter<T1>::Print(value.first, os);
571 *os << ", ";
572 UniversalPrinter<T2>::Print(value.second, os);
573 *os << ')';
574}
575
576// Implements printing a non-reference type T by letting the compiler
577// pick the right overload of PrintTo() for T.
578template <typename T>
579class UniversalPrinter {
580 public:
581 // MSVC warns about adding const to a function type, so we want to
582 // disable the warning.
583#ifdef _MSC_VER
584# pragma warning(push) // Saves the current warning state.
585# pragma warning(disable:4180) // Temporarily disables warning 4180.
586#endif // _MSC_VER
587
588 // Note: we deliberately don't call this PrintTo(), as that name
589 // conflicts with ::testing::internal::PrintTo in the body of the
590 // function.
591 static void Print(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
592 // By default, ::testing::internal::PrintTo() is used for printing
593 // the value.
594 //
595 // Thanks to Koenig look-up, if T is a class and has its own
596 // PrintTo() function defined in its namespace, that function will
597 // be visible here. Since it is more specific than the generic ones
598 // in ::testing::internal, it will be picked by the compiler in the
599 // following statement - exactly what we want.
600 PrintTo(value, os);
601 }
602
603#ifdef _MSC_VER
604# pragma warning(pop) // Restores the warning state.
605#endif // _MSC_VER
606};
607
608// UniversalPrintArray(begin, len, os) prints an array of 'len'
609// elements, starting at address 'begin'.
610template <typename T>
611void UniversalPrintArray(const T* begin, size_t len, ::std::ostream* os) {
612 if (len == 0) {
613 *os << "{}";
614 } else {
615 *os << "{ ";
616 const size_t kThreshold = 18;
617 const size_t kChunkSize = 8;
618 // If the array has more than kThreshold elements, we'll have to
619 // omit some details by printing only the first and the last
620 // kChunkSize elements.
621 // TODO(wan@google.com): let the user control the threshold using a flag.
622 if (len <= kThreshold) {
623 PrintRawArrayTo(begin, len, os);
624 } else {
625 PrintRawArrayTo(begin, kChunkSize, os);
626 *os << ", ..., ";
627 PrintRawArrayTo(begin + len - kChunkSize, kChunkSize, os);
628 }
629 *os << " }";
630 }
631}
632// This overload prints a (const) char array compactly.
633GTEST_API_ void UniversalPrintArray(
634 const char* begin, size_t len, ::std::ostream* os);
635
636// This overload prints a (const) wchar_t array compactly.
637GTEST_API_ void UniversalPrintArray(
638 const wchar_t* begin, size_t len, ::std::ostream* os);
639
640// Implements printing an array type T[N].
641template <typename T, size_t N>
642class UniversalPrinter<T[N]> {
643 public:
644 // Prints the given array, omitting some elements when there are too
645 // many.
646 static void Print(const T (&a)[N], ::std::ostream* os) {
647 UniversalPrintArray(a, N, os);
648 }
649};
650
651// Implements printing a reference type T&.
652template <typename T>
653class UniversalPrinter<T&> {
654 public:
655 // MSVC warns about adding const to a function type, so we want to
656 // disable the warning.
657#ifdef _MSC_VER
658# pragma warning(push) // Saves the current warning state.
659# pragma warning(disable:4180) // Temporarily disables warning 4180.
660#endif // _MSC_VER
661
662 static void Print(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
663 // Prints the address of the value. We use reinterpret_cast here
664 // as static_cast doesn't compile when T is a function type.
665 *os << "@" << reinterpret_cast<const void*>(&value) << " ";
666
667 // Then prints the value itself.
668 UniversalPrint(value, os);
669 }
670
671#ifdef _MSC_VER
672# pragma warning(pop) // Restores the warning state.
673#endif // _MSC_VER
674};
675
676// Prints a value tersely: for a reference type, the referenced value
677// (but not the address) is printed; for a (const) char pointer, the
678// NUL-terminated string (but not the pointer) is printed.
679
680template <typename T>
681class UniversalTersePrinter {
682 public:
683 static void Print(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
684 UniversalPrint(value, os);
685 }
686};
687template <typename T>
688class UniversalTersePrinter<T&> {
689 public:
690 static void Print(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
691 UniversalPrint(value, os);
692 }
693};
694template <typename T, size_t N>
695class UniversalTersePrinter<T[N]> {
696 public:
697 static void Print(const T (&value)[N], ::std::ostream* os) {
698 UniversalPrinter<T[N]>::Print(value, os);
699 }
700};
701template <>
702class UniversalTersePrinter<const char*> {
703 public:
704 static void Print(const char* str, ::std::ostream* os) {
705 if (str == NULL) {
706 *os << "NULL";
707 } else {
708 UniversalPrint(string(str), os);
709 }
710 }
711};
712template <>
713class UniversalTersePrinter<char*> {
714 public:
715 static void Print(char* str, ::std::ostream* os) {
716 UniversalTersePrinter<const char*>::Print(str, os);
717 }
718};
719
720#if GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
721template <>
722class UniversalTersePrinter<const wchar_t*> {
723 public:
724 static void Print(const wchar_t* str, ::std::ostream* os) {
725 if (str == NULL) {
726 *os << "NULL";
727 } else {
728 UniversalPrint(::std::wstring(str), os);
729 }
730 }
731};
732#endif
733
734template <>
735class UniversalTersePrinter<wchar_t*> {
736 public:
737 static void Print(wchar_t* str, ::std::ostream* os) {
738 UniversalTersePrinter<const wchar_t*>::Print(str, os);
739 }
740};
741
742template <typename T>
743void UniversalTersePrint(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
744 UniversalTersePrinter<T>::Print(value, os);
745}
746
747// Prints a value using the type inferred by the compiler. The
748// difference between this and UniversalTersePrint() is that for a
749// (const) char pointer, this prints both the pointer and the
750// NUL-terminated string.
751template <typename T>
752void UniversalPrint(const T& value, ::std::ostream* os) {
753 // A workarond for the bug in VC++ 7.1 that prevents us from instantiating
754 // UniversalPrinter with T directly.
755 typedef T T1;
756 UniversalPrinter<T1>::Print(value, os);
757}
758
759#if GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
760typedef ::std::vector<string> Strings;
761
762// This helper template allows PrintTo() for tuples and
763// UniversalTersePrintTupleFieldsToStrings() to be defined by
764// induction on the number of tuple fields. The idea is that
765// TuplePrefixPrinter<N>::PrintPrefixTo(t, os) prints the first N
766// fields in tuple t, and can be defined in terms of
767// TuplePrefixPrinter<N - 1>.
768
769// The inductive case.
770template <size_t N>
771struct TuplePrefixPrinter {
772 // Prints the first N fields of a tuple.
773 template <typename Tuple>
774 static void PrintPrefixTo(const Tuple& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
775 TuplePrefixPrinter<N - 1>::PrintPrefixTo(t, os);
776 *os << ", ";
777 UniversalPrinter<typename ::std::tr1::tuple_element<N - 1, Tuple>::type>
778 ::Print(::std::tr1::get<N - 1>(t), os);
779 }
780
781 // Tersely prints the first N fields of a tuple to a string vector,
782 // one element for each field.
783 template <typename Tuple>
784 static void TersePrintPrefixToStrings(const Tuple& t, Strings* strings) {
785 TuplePrefixPrinter<N - 1>::TersePrintPrefixToStrings(t, strings);
786 ::std::stringstream ss;
787 UniversalTersePrint(::std::tr1::get<N - 1>(t), &ss);
788 strings->push_back(ss.str());
789 }
790};
791
792// Base cases.
793template <>
794struct TuplePrefixPrinter<0> {
795 template <typename Tuple>
796 static void PrintPrefixTo(const Tuple&, ::std::ostream*) {}
797
798 template <typename Tuple>
799 static void TersePrintPrefixToStrings(const Tuple&, Strings*) {}
800};
801// We have to specialize the entire TuplePrefixPrinter<> class
802// template here, even though the definition of
803// TersePrintPrefixToStrings() is the same as the generic version, as
804// Embarcadero (formerly CodeGear, formerly Borland) C++ doesn't
805// support specializing a method template of a class template.
806template <>
807struct TuplePrefixPrinter<1> {
808 template <typename Tuple>
809 static void PrintPrefixTo(const Tuple& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
810 UniversalPrinter<typename ::std::tr1::tuple_element<0, Tuple>::type>::
811 Print(::std::tr1::get<0>(t), os);
812 }
813
814 template <typename Tuple>
815 static void TersePrintPrefixToStrings(const Tuple& t, Strings* strings) {
816 ::std::stringstream ss;
817 UniversalTersePrint(::std::tr1::get<0>(t), &ss);
818 strings->push_back(ss.str());
819 }
820};
821
822// Helper function for printing a tuple. T must be instantiated with
823// a tuple type.
824template <typename T>
825void PrintTupleTo(const T& t, ::std::ostream* os) {
826 *os << "(";
827 TuplePrefixPrinter< ::std::tr1::tuple_size<T>::value>::
828 PrintPrefixTo(t, os);
829 *os << ")";
830}
831
832// Prints the fields of a tuple tersely to a string vector, one
833// element for each field. See the comment before
834// UniversalTersePrint() for how we define "tersely".
835template <typename Tuple>
836Strings UniversalTersePrintTupleFieldsToStrings(const Tuple& value) {
837 Strings result;
838 TuplePrefixPrinter< ::std::tr1::tuple_size<Tuple>::value>::
839 TersePrintPrefixToStrings(value, &result);
840 return result;
841}
842#endif // GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
843
844} // namespace internal
845
846template <typename T>
847::std::string PrintToString(const T& value) {
848 ::std::stringstream ss;
849 internal::UniversalTersePrinter<T>::Print(value, &ss);
850 return ss.str();
851}
852
853} // namespace testing
854
855#endif // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_PRINTERS_H_
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