I am attempting to write some unit tests for some Ada code I recently wrote, I have a particular case where I am expecting to get an Exception (if the code worked correctly I wouldn't but in this case all I'm doing is testing, not writing code). If I handle the exception in the Testing routine then I don't see how I can continue testing in that procedure.
I.E. (This is very much an example and NOT compilable code)
procedure Test_Function is
begin
from -20 to 20
Result := SQRT(i);
if Result = (Expected) then
print "Passed";
end_if;
exception:
print "FAILED";
end Test_Function
My first thought is if I had a "deeper function" which actually did the call and the exception returned through that.
I.E. (This is very much an example and NOT compilable code)
procedure Test_Function is
begin
from -20 to 20
Result := my_SQRT(i);
if Result = (Expected) then
print "Passed";
end_if;
exception:
print "FAILED";
end Test_Function
function my_SQRT(integer) return Integer is
begin
return SQRT(i);
exception:
return -1;
end my_SQRT;
And in theory I expect that would work, I just hate to have to keep writing sub functions when my test_function, is expected to do the actual testing.
Is there a way to continue execution after hitting the exception IN Test_Function, rather than having to write a wrapper function and calling through that? OR Is there a easier/better way to handle this kind of scenario?
*Sorry for the poor code example, but I think the idea should be clear, if not I'll re-write the code.