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Version: 5.6

Assertions

Kotest is split into several subprojects which can be used independently. One of these subprojects is the comprehensive assertion / matchers support. These can be used with the Kotest test framework, or with another test framework like JUnit or Spock.

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The core functionality of the assertion modules are functions that test state. Kotest calls these types of state assertion functions matchers. There are core matchers and matchers for third party libraries.

There are also many other utilities for writing tests, such as testing for exceptions, functions to help test non-determistic code, inspectors for collections, and soft assertions to group assertions.

Multitude of Matchers​

For example, to assert that a variable has an expected value, we can use the shouldBe function.

name shouldBe "sam"

There are general purpose matchers, such as shouldBe as well as matchers for many other specific scenarios, such as str.shouldHaveLength(10) for testing the length of a string, and file.shouldBeDirectory() which test that a particular file points to a directory. They come in both infix and regular variants.

Assertions can generally be chained, for example:

"substring".shouldContain("str")
.shouldBeLowerCase()

myImageFile.shouldHaveExtension(".jpg")
.shouldStartWith("https")

There are over 350 matchers spread across multiple modules. Read about all the matchers here.

Clues​

Sometimes a failed assertion does not contain enough information to know exactly what went wrong.

For example,

user.name shouldNotBe null

If this failed, you would simply get:

<null> should not equal <null>

Which isn't particularly helpful. We can add extra context to failure messages through the use of clues.

Inspectors​

Inspectors allow us to test elements in a collection, and assert the quantity of elements that should be expected to pass (all, none, exactly k and so on). For example

mylist.forExactly(3) {
it.city shouldBe "Chicago"
}

Read about inspectors here

Custom Matchers​

It is easy to add your own matchers by extending the Matcher<T> interface, where T is the type you wish to match against. Custom matchers can compose existing matchers or be completely standalone.

See a full worked example.