Class IsArrayContainingInAnyOrder<E>

java.lang.Object
org.hamcrest.BaseMatcher<E[]>
org.hamcrest.TypeSafeMatcher<E[]>
org.hamcrest.collection.IsArrayContainingInAnyOrder<E>
All Implemented Interfaces:
Matcher<E[]>, SelfDescribing

@Deprecated public class IsArrayContainingInAnyOrder<E> extends TypeSafeMatcher<E[]>
Deprecated.
As of release 2.1, replaced by ArrayMatching.
  • Constructor Details

    • IsArrayContainingInAnyOrder

      public IsArrayContainingInAnyOrder(Collection<Matcher<? super E>> matchers)
      Deprecated.
  • Method Details

    • matchesSafely

      public boolean matchesSafely(E[] item)
      Deprecated.
      Description copied from class: TypeSafeMatcher
      Subclasses should implement this. The item will already have been checked for the specific type and will never be null.
      Specified by:
      matchesSafely in class TypeSafeMatcher<E[]>
    • describeMismatchSafely

      public void describeMismatchSafely(E[] item, Description mismatchDescription)
      Deprecated.
      Description copied from class: TypeSafeMatcher
      Subclasses should override this. The item will already have been checked for the specific type and will never be null.
      Overrides:
      describeMismatchSafely in class TypeSafeMatcher<E[]>
    • describeTo

      public void describeTo(Description description)
      Deprecated.
      Description copied from interface: SelfDescribing
      Generates a description of the object. The description may be part of a a description of a larger object of which this is just a component, so it should be worded appropriately.
      Parameters:
      description - The description to be built or appended to.
    • arrayContainingInAnyOrder

      public static <E> Matcher<E[]> arrayContainingInAnyOrder(Matcher<? super E>... itemMatchers)
      Deprecated.
      Creates an order agnostic matcher for arrays that matches when each item in the examined array satisfies one matcher anywhere in the specified matchers. For a positive match, the examined array must be of the same length as the number of specified matchers.

      N.B. each of the specified matchers will only be used once during a given examination, so be careful when specifying matchers that may be satisfied by more than one entry in an examined array.

      For example:

      assertThat(new String[]{"foo", "bar"}, arrayContainingInAnyOrder(equalTo("bar"), equalTo("foo")))
      Parameters:
      itemMatchers - a list of matchers, each of which must be satisfied by an entry in an examined array
    • arrayContainingInAnyOrder

      public static <E> Matcher<E[]> arrayContainingInAnyOrder(Collection<Matcher<? super E>> itemMatchers)
      Deprecated.
      Creates an order agnostic matcher for arrays that matches when each item in the examined array satisfies one matcher anywhere in the specified collection of matchers. For a positive match, the examined array must be of the same length as the specified collection of matchers.

      N.B. each matcher in the specified collection will only be used once during a given examination, so be careful when specifying matchers that may be satisfied by more than one entry in an examined array.

      For example:

      assertThat(new String[]{"foo", "bar"}, arrayContainingInAnyOrder(Arrays.asList(equalTo("bar"), equalTo("foo"))))
      Parameters:
      itemMatchers - a list of matchers, each of which must be satisfied by an item provided by an examined array
    • arrayContainingInAnyOrder

      public static <E> Matcher<E[]> arrayContainingInAnyOrder(E... items)
      Deprecated.
      Creates an order agnostic matcher for arrays that matches when each item in the examined array is logically equal to one item anywhere in the specified items. For a positive match, the examined array must be of the same length as the number of specified items.

      N.B. each of the specified items will only be used once during a given examination, so be careful when specifying items that may be equal to more than one entry in an examined array.

      For example:

      assertThat(new String[]{"foo", "bar"}, containsInAnyOrder("bar", "foo"))
      Parameters:
      items - the items that must equal the entries of an examined array, in any order