public static final class PrimitiveFloatArraySubject.FloatArrayAsIterable extends IterableSubject.UsingCorrespondence<Float,Number>
Iterable
subjects, in which the elements of the array under test are
compared to expected elements using either exact or tolerant float equality: see PrimitiveFloatArraySubject.usingExactEquality()
and PrimitiveFloatArraySubject.usingTolerance(double)
. Call methods on this object to actually
execute the proposition.
In the exact equality case, the methods on this class which take Number
arguments
only accept certain instances: again, see PrimitiveFloatArraySubject.usingExactEquality()
for details.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Ordered |
containsAllOf(float[] expected)
As
#containsAllOf(Number, Number, Number...) but taking a primitive float array. |
void |
containsAnyOf(float[] expected)
As
#containsAnyOf(Number, Number, Number...) but taking a primitive float array. |
Ordered |
containsExactly(float[] expected)
As
#containsExactly(Number...) but taking a primitive float array. |
void |
containsNoneOf(float[] excluded)
As
#containsNoneOf(Number, Number, Number...) but taking a primitive float array. |
contains, containsAllIn, containsAllOf, containsAnyIn, containsAnyOf, containsExactly, containsExactlyElementsIn, containsNoneIn, containsNoneOf, doesNotContain
public Ordered containsAllOf(float[] expected)
#containsAllOf(Number, Number, Number...)
but taking a primitive float array.public void containsAnyOf(float[] expected)
#containsAnyOf(Number, Number, Number...)
but taking a primitive float array.public Ordered containsExactly(float[] expected)
#containsExactly(Number...)
but taking a primitive float array.public void containsNoneOf(float[] excluded)
#containsNoneOf(Number, Number, Number...)
but taking a primitive float array.Copyright © 2017. All rights reserved.