I have a very strange situation, I have created Features and Scenarios in the feature file and corresponding step definitions and methods in the separate class.
I have run tests by running a feature file, and everything was fine, all tests were green.
But, when I run tests from TestRunner class, I got the following message:
Undefined step: Given I am on the Facebook Login page and suggested code.
You can implement missing steps with the snippets below:
#Given("^I am on the Facebook Login page$")
public void i_am_on_the_Facebook_Login_page() throws Throwable {
// Write code here that turns the phrase above into concrete actions
throw new PendingException();
}
I have noticed that the suggested method have underscore:
(i_am_on_the_Facebook_Login_page())
but my methods do not have underscore
(iAmOnTheFacebookLoginPage())
Does anybody have an idea why this happens? I can't run tests now even from the feature file.
Recently, I have started using Mac and IntelliJ instead of Windows and Eclipse.
Is it possible that IntelliJ causes the problem?
P.S. I have used the option "Create step definition" from IntelliJ
ah...I figured out what the problem was...I forgot to put this piece of code
snippets = SnippetType.CAMELCASE
in CucumberOptions.
So, when I put this line of code here
#CucumberOptions(
plugin = {"pretty"},
features = {"src/test/resources/features"}, glue = {"/java/stepDefinitions"}, snippets = SnippetType.CAMELCASE)
everything works just fine.
It is possible your features folder is not in the build path (being a test folder) so Cucumber is unable to find it. Try this.
I've been receiving a strange error after hot-reloading my code:
Logs (I'll provide them in text form if needed)
The error references a Notice Range Sphere component. It's just a UDetectionSphere, a simple wrapper for USphereComponent. It used to work correctly, I think the problems begun when I re-parented BaseEnemy from ACharacter to ABaseEntity (see class graph). The game seems to work fine, but the fact that there is an error can't be a good thing. I also can't edit component's properties in editor (both for notice and forget range spheres and for some reason arrow component inherited from ACharacter). Again, it used to work correctly and I was able to edit it. Here's how those components are declared (BaseEnemy.h):
public:
UPROPERTY(VisibleAnywhere, BlueprintReadOnly, Category = "Setup")
UDetectionSphere * NoticeRangeSphere;
UPROPERTY(VisibleAnywhere, BlueprintReadOnly, Category = "Setup")
UDetectionSphere * ForgetRangeSphere;
I'm pretty sure the error in logs is a simple fix, but I don't even know where to start looking. I can't find this error in google, so it's probably something trivial I'm overlooking. How do I go about fixing this?
I have code using AutoMapper 3.2.1.0 that uses the method ToNullSafeString().
I upgraded the NUGet package to 4.1.1.0, and I can no longer find the method in their package.Does anyone know the recommended approach to replacing the function? Is there a new construct that is functionally equivalent? If so, I cannot figure what it is. Nor can I find any mention of why it was removed.
This question has actually been answered pretty well in a couple of comments below it. For completeness, here are a couple of actual implementations of solutions.
Short answer
Probably both the simplest and the best solution: Replace all instances of .ToNullSafeString() with ?.ToString(). This does the same, but uses functionality built into newer versions of .Net instead of relying on an external extension method.
Alternative answer
If you've got a bunch of calls to the ToNullSafeString() method from the earlier version Automapper, and for some reason or other you can't or don't want to go through all your code and edit it away right now, you can use this instead.
Add the following class to your project, and make sure it can be reached from any classes that previously called the Automapper-method. Those calls will then automatically point to this instead.
public static class NullSafeStringHelper
{
public static string ToNullSafeString(this object value)
{
return value?.ToString();
}
}
After upgrading from IDEA 13.1.x to 14.x (14.0.2 at the moment) I see the support for Spock Framework Mock() and Stub() methods got worse.
To be more specific, I mean in-line methods stubbing/mocking with closures like:
MyType stub = Stub {
myMethod() >> { /* do something */ }
}
IDEA 13 is aware of available methods for stubbed type, which is visible on the below screen shot.
size() method is not underlined. It can be navigated to, auto-completed, checked for possible argument types and so on - usual IDE stuff. The same is possible with any other List method inside of the 'stub closure'.
While IDEA 14 lacks this feature which really is a pity. The screen shot below shows it.
size() method is underlined and greyed out. IDE seems to not have a clue what's up.
The same applies to Mock { } method event if invoked with a type as an argument like Mock(MyType) { } (and Stub(MyType) { } respectively)
My question is - is it only me or that's a bug/regression? Or maybe I need to adjust some settings?
EDIT: seems it's a bug / regression. I raised a bug in youtrack. Up vote, please.
There is a bug in storage system, i.e. GDSL works itself, but state is inconsistent across IDE startups.
As a temporary solution:
Project View -> External Libraries -> spock-core
open org.spockframework.idea.spock.gdsl in Editor
wait until Notification about disabled GDSL comes out
use Activate link in the Notification
You should enable GDSL every time you start up your Idea.
This bug is fixed and the fix will be released asap.
Since I don't know exactly what part of it alone that triggers the error, I'm not entirely sure how to better label it.
This question is a by-product of the SO question c# code seems to get optimized in an invalid way such that an object value becomes null, which I attempted to help Gary with yesterday evening. He was the one that found out that there was a problem, I've just reduced the problem to a simpler project, and want verification before I go further with it, hence this question here.
I'll post a note on Microsoft Connect if others can verify that they too get this problem, and of course I hope that either Jon, Mads or Eric will take a look at it as well :)
It involves:
3 projects, 2 of which are class libraries, one of which is a console program (this last one isn't needed to reproduce the problem, but just executing this shows the problem, whereas you need to use reflector and look at the compiled code if you don't add it)
Incomplete references and type inference
Generics
The code is available here: code repository.
I'll post a description below of how to make the projects if you rather want to get your hands dirty.
The problem exhibits itself by producing an invalid cast in a method call, before returning a simple generic list, casting it to something strange before returning it. The original code ended up with a cast to a boolean, yes, a boolean. The compiler added a cast from a List<SomeEntityObject> to a boolean, before returning the result, and the method signature said that it would return a List<SomeEntityObject>. This in turn leads to odd problems at runtime, everything from the result of the method call being considered "optimized away" (the original question), or a crash with either BadImageFormatException or InvalidProgramException or one of the similar exceptions.
During my work to reproduce this, I've seen a cast to void[], and the current version of my code now casts to a TypedReference. In one case, Reflector crashes so most likely the code was beyond hope in that case. Your mileage might vary.
Here's what to do to reproduce it:
Note: There is likely that there are more minimal forms that will reproduce the problem, but moving all the code to just one project made it go away. Removing the generics from the classes also makes the problem go away. The code below reproduces the problem each time for me, so I'm leaving it as is.
I apologize for the escaped html characters in the code below, this is Markdown playing a trick on me, if anyone knows how I can rectify it, please let me know, or just edit the question
Create a new Visual Studio 2010 solution containing a console application, for .NET 4.0
Add two new projects, both class libraries, also .NET 4.0 (I'm going to assume they're named ClassLibrary1 and ClassLibrary2)
Adjust all the projects to use the full .NET 4.0 runtime, not just the client profile
Add a reference in the console project to ClassLibrary2
Add a reference in ClassLibrary2 to ClassLibrary 1
Remove the two Class1.cs files that was added by default to the class libraries
In ClassLibrary1, add a reference to System.Runtime.Caching
Add a new file to ClassLibrary1, call it DummyCache.cs, and paste in the following code:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Runtime.Caching;
namespace ClassLibrary1
{
public class DummyCache<TModel> where TModel : new()
{
public void TriggerMethod<T>()
{
}
// Try commenting this out, note that it is never called!
public void TriggerMethod<T>(T value, CacheItemPolicy policy)
{
}
public CacheItemPolicy GetDefaultCacheItemPolicy()
{
return null;
}
public CacheItemPolicy GetDefaultCacheItemPolicy(IEnumerable<string> dependentKeys, bool createInsertDependency = false)
{
return null;
}
}
}
Add a new file to ClassLibrary2, call it Dummy.cs and paste in the following code:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using ClassLibrary1;
namespace ClassLibrary2
{
public class Dummy
{
private DummyCache<Dummy> Cache { get; set; }
public void TryCommentingMeOut()
{
Cache.TriggerMethod<Dummy>();
}
public List<Dummy> GetDummies()
{
var policy = Cache.GetDefaultCacheItemPolicy();
return new List<Dummy>();
}
}
}
Paste in the following code in Program.cs in the console project:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using ClassLibrary2;
namespace ConsoleApplication23
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Dummy dummy = new Dummy();
// This will crash with InvalidProgramException
// or BadImageFormatException, or a similar exception
List<Dummy> dummies = dummy.GetDummies();
}
}
}
Build, and ensure there are no compiler errors
Now try running the program. This should crash with one of the more horrible exceptions. I've seen both InvalidProgramException and BadImageFormatException, depending on what the cast ended up as
Look at the generated code of Dummy.GetDummies in Reflector. The source code looks like this:
public List<Dummy> GetDummies()
{
var policy = Cache.GetDefaultCacheItemPolicy();
return new List<Dummy>();
}
however reflector says (for me, it might differ in which cast it chose for you, and in one case Reflector even crashed):
public List<Dummy> GetDummies()
{
List<Dummy> policy = (List<Dummy>)this.Cache.GetDefaultCacheItemPolicy();
TypedReference CS$1$0000 = (TypedReference) new List<Dummy>();
return (List<Dummy>) CS$1$0000;
}
Now, here's a couple of odd things, the above crash/invalid code aside:
Library2, which has Dummy.GetDummies, performs a call to get the default cache policy on the class from Library1. It uses type inference var policy = ..., and the result is an CacheItemPolicy object (null in the code, but type is important).
However, ClassLibrary2 does not have a reference to System.Runtime.Caching, so it should not compile.
And indeed, if you comment out the method in Dummy that is named TryCommentingMeOut, you get:
The type 'System.Runtime.Caching.CacheItemPolicy' is defined in an assembly that is not referenced. You must add a reference to assembly 'System.Runtime.Caching, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a'.
Why having this method present makes the compiler happy I don't know, and I don't even know if this is linked to the current problem or not. Perhaps it is a second bug.
There is a similar method in DummyCache, if you restore the method in Dummy, so that the code again compiles, and then comment out the method in DummyCache that has the "Try commenting this out" comment above it, you get the same compiler error
OK, I downloaded your code and can confirm the problem as described.
I have not done any extensive tinkering with this, but when I run & reflector a Release build all seems OK (= null ref exception and clean disassembly).
Reflector (6.10.11) crashed on the Debug builds.
One more experiment: I wondered about the use of CacheItemPolicies so I replaced it with my own MyCacheItemPolicy (in a 3rd classlib) and the same BadImageFormat exception pops up.
The exception mentions : {"Bad binary signature. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131192)"}