solid_assert is a simple implementation of an assert
utility in Ruby. It lets you write tests for your assumptions while coding.
Assertions are meant to test conditions about the integrity of your code. You should use them for testing assumptions like the following:
- If the flow reaches here, then this variable has to have this value.
- This line of code should never be executed.
- At this point, this list should contain one entry for each key in this hash.
Add to your Gemfile
:
gem "solid_assert"
You can enable/disable assertions with:
SolidAssert.enable_assertions
SolidAssert.disable_assertions
Assertions are disabled by default and are typically used in development mode only. You might want to disable them in production for performance reasons.
Use assert
for testing conditions. You can optionally provide an error message.
assert some_string != "some value"
assert clients.empty?, "The list must not be empty!"
Use invariant
for testing blocks of code. This comes handy
when testing your assumptions requires several lines of code.
You can provide an optional message too.
invariant do
one_variable = calculate_some_value
other_variable = calculate_some_other_value
one_variable > other_variable
end
invariant "Lists must have equal sizes!" do
len = calculate_list_length
other_len = calculate_other_list_length
len == other_len
end
Failed assertion will raise SolidAssert::AssertionFailedError
error. You shouldn't catch it in a rescue
block! If it raised then something is wrong with either your code or with you assumption. Assertions shouldn't be used for handling error situations! Use Ruby built-in exception handling for that.
Create a file named solid_assert.rb
in the config/initializers
dir with the following content:
SolidAssert.enable_assertions unless Rails.env.production?
This way assertions will be disabled in production and enabled in the rest of environments.
- Programming with assertions. A great article on assertions. It is about the Java language, but the concepts apply to any programming language.
- There are good references to assertive programming in some classic books like The Pragmatic Programmer From Journeyman to Master, Code Complete and Writing solid code