Provided by: libtest-unit-perl_0.25-3_all bug

NAME

       Test::Unit::Result - unit testing framework helper class

SYNOPSIS

       This class is not intended to be used directly

DESCRIPTION

       This class is used by the framework to record the results of tests, which will throw an
       instance of a subclass of Test::Unit::Exception in case of errors or failures.

       To achieve this, this class gets called with a test case as argument.  It will call this
       test case's run method back and catch any exceptions thrown.

       It could be argued that Test::Unit::Result is the heart of the PerlUnit framework, since
       TestCase classes vary, and you can use one of several Test::Unit::TestRunners, but we
       always gather the results in a Test::Unit::Result object.

       This is the quintessential call tree of the communication needed to record the results of
       a given test:

           $aTestCase->run() {
               # creates result
               $aTestResult->run($aTestCase) {
                   # catches exception and records it
                   $aTestCase->run_bare() {
                       # runs test method inside eval
                       $aTestCase->run_test() {
                           # calls method $aTestCase->name()
                           # and propagates exception
                           # method will call Assert::assert()
                           # to cause failure if test fails on
                           # test assertion
                           # it finds this because $aTestCase is-a Assert
                       }
                   }
               }
           }

       Note too that, in the presence of Test::Unit::TestSuites, this call tree can get a little
       more convoluted, but if you bear the above in mind it should be apparent what's going on.

AUTHOR

       Copyright (c) 2000-2002, 2005 the PerlUnit Development Team (see Test::Unit or the AUTHORS
       file included in this distribution).

       All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
       it under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

       •   Test::Unit::Assert

       •   Test::Unit::TestCase

       •   Test::Unit::Exception