The goal of testthatmulti is to enhance the R package
testthat
so that noisy tests can be run. If a test fails 1%
of the time, it can cause problems with R packages. By allowing each
test multiple attempts to pass, unexpected and rare test failures can be
avoided.
You can install the development version of testthatmulti from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
::install_github("CollinErickson/testthatmulti") devtools
For example, suppose you have a test that passes 99% of the time. This can happen when tests are run using randomly generated data, such as for modeling or optimization.
set.seed(153)
library(testthat)
<- runif(1)
x cat('x is', x, '\n')
#> x is 0.9975921
expect_true(x < .99)
#> Error: x < 0.99 is not TRUE
#>
#> `actual`: FALSE
#> `expected`: TRUE
This test will usually pass, but could fail occasionally and cause problems when submitting to CRAN.
To give the test multiple chances to pass, wrap the function
ttm
around the code for the tests and tell it how many
times to run the tests. It will succeed if all the tests are passed on
any single iteration. In the code for the tests, replace
expect_true
with ttm_expect_true
and
expect_equal
with ttm_expect_equal
.
Below, we run the same test as above, but give it 3 chances to pass. By giving it 3 attempts to pass the test, the probability of failure drops from 1% to 0.0001%
set.seed(153)
library(testthatmulti)
ttm(10, {
<- runif(1)
x cat('x is', x, '\n')
ttm_expect_true(x < .99)
})#> x is 0.9975921
#> x is 0.4970875