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Soar with Haskell

You're reading from  Soar with Haskell

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805128458
Pages 418 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Tom Schrijvers Tom Schrijvers
Profile icon Tom Schrijvers

Table of Contents (23) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1:Basic Functional Programming
2. Chapter 1: Functions 3. Chapter 2: Algebraic Datatypes 4. Chapter 3: Recursion 5. Chapter 4: Higher-Order Functions 6. Part 2: Haskell-Specific Features
7. Chapter 5: First-Class Functions 8. Chapter 6: Type Classes 9. Chapter 7: Lazy Evaluation 10. Chapter 8: Input/Output 11. Part 3: Functional Design Patterns
12. Chapter 9: Monoids and Foldables 13. Chapter 10: Functors, Applicative Functors, and Traversables 14. Chapter 11: Monads 15. Chapter 12: Monad Transformers 16. Part 4: Practical Programming
17. Chapter 13: Domain-Specific Languages 18. Chapter 14: Parser Combinators 19. Chapter 15: Lenses 20. Chapter 16: Property-Based Testing 21. Index 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we explored testing in Haskell. In particular, we contrasted unit testing with property-based testing in QuickCheck. The latter allows more thorough testing with less effort, but writing test properties requires a bit more abstraction. We have seen that, to support properties of user-defined types, we should instantiate the Arbitrary type class to supply a generator for test inputs. Ideally, we also supply a shrinking strategy, which QuickCheck uses to derive smaller, more manageable counterexamples.

Although still relatively little known outside of the Haskell community, there are clones of the QuickCheck library available for many other programming languages. Also, for Haskell, several variants exist, such as SmallCheck, which replaces random generation with systematic enumeration of small values. Moreover, modern testing frameworks such as hspec combine property-based and unit testing under the same roof.

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