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io » assertFileContent(file,match,asLines)

Description

This command asserts that file is readable and contains text content that match the specified match parameter. The match parameter can be expressed as plain text, which also means that the assertion in question is an “exact match” test, or as a PolyMatcher for more flexible and expressive form of matching.


PolyMatcher Enabled

PolyMatcher - a flexible way to perform text matching

In addition to extract text matching (or string matching), this command/expression also supports "polymatcher" (as of v3.6). With polymatcher, one can instruct Nexial to match the intended text in a less exact (but more expressiveness) way. Here are the supported matching strategies:

  • CONTAIN:: Use this technique to perform partial text matches. For example: use CONTAIN:completed as intent for "matching text that contains the text ‘completed’".
  • CONTAIN_ANY_CASE:: Use this technique to perform partial text matches (same as CONTAIN:), except without considering the uppercase/lowercase variants. For example, CONTAIN_ANY_CASE:Successfully would match "Completed successfully", "Completed Successfully", and "COMPLETED SUCCESSFULLY".
  • START:: Use this technique to perform "starts with" text matches. For example, START:Greetings matches any text starting with the text "Greetings".
  • START_ANY_CASE:: Use this technique to perform "starts with" text matches without considering letter casing. For example, START_ANY_CASE:Greetings matches any text starting with the text "Greetings", "GREETINGS", "greetings", "greeTINGs", etc.
  • END:: Use this technique to perform "ends with" text matches. For example, END:Please try again. matches any text that ends with the text "Please try again.".
  • END_ANY_CASE:: Use this technique to perform "ends with" text matches without considering letter casing. For example, END_ANY_CASE:Please try again. matches any text that ends with the text "Please try again." in any combination of upper or lower case.
  • REGEX:: Use this technique to perform text matching via regular expression. For example: use REGEX:.+[S|s]uccessfully.* as intent for "matching text that contains 1 or more character, then either ‘Successfully’ or ‘successfully’, follow by zero or more characters.".
  • EMPTY:[true|false]: Use this technique to perform "is empty?" check. EMPTY:true means that the target value is expected to be empty (no content or length). EMPTY:false means the target value is expected NOT to be empty (with content).
  • BLANK:[true|false]: Use this technique to perform "is blank?" check. BLANK:true means that the target value is expected to contain blank(s) or whitespace (space, tab, newline, line feed, etc.) characters or empty (no content or length). BLANK:false means the target value is expected to contain at least 1 non-whitespace character. Note that this matcher includes te EMPTY: check as well.
  • LENGTH:: Use this technique to perform text length validation against target value. One may use a numeric comparator for added flexibility/expressiveness. For example: LENGTH:5 means to match the target value to a length of 5. LENGTH: > 5 means to match the target value to a length greater than 5. The available comparators are: >, >=, <, <=, =, !=.
  • NUMERIC:: Use this technique to perform numeric comparison/matching against target value. With this technique, 100 considered the same as 100.00 since both value has the same numerical value. One may use a numeric comparator for added flexibility/expressiveness. For example: NUMERIC:5 means to match the target value to the number 5. NUMERIC: <= -15.02 means to match the target value as a number that is less or equal to -15.02. The available comparators are: >, >=, <, <=, =, !=.
  • EXACT:: Use this to perform exact text matching, i.e. equality matching. In most cases, this is not required as the absence of any special keyword almost always means the "is this the same as that?" test. However in some special cases such as base » assertMatch(text,regex), one may use this EXACT: syntax to indicate match by equality instead of regular expression.
  • And, of course, one can still use the exact matching strategy by specifying the exact text to match.

We will be adding new strategy to polymatcher – Please feel free to request for new ones!


The third parameter instructs Nexial to either match the entire file content or to match line-by-line.

Parameters

  • file - the full path of the target file to check: (a) does the file exist? (b) is the file readable by the run-user of the execution? (c) is it empty? Failure to any of these check would yield a FAIL outcome.
  • match - the match to apply against the content of the file. PolyMatcher supported.
  • asLines - true if the matching should be applied one line at a time, or false to match the entire file against the specified match. For line-by-line matching, every line must matched the specified match in order to be considered a PASS.

Example

Script:
script

The content of ${test1.file} (unitTest_io_sample1.txt):
file1

The script asserts against the first file in its entirety (asLines is false). Since the file contains John|Doe and starts with EY15, both line 10 and 11 resulted in PASS (below).

The content of ${test2.file} (unitTest_io_sample2.txt):
file1

The script asserts against the second file in line-by-line mode (asLines is true). Line 13 and 14 results in PASS because every line in this file contains 2022-12 and starts with ABC12345. However, since not every line ends with 92001, line 15 results in FAIL. See below for details.

Output:
output