diff options
Diffstat (limited to 't')
-rw-r--r-- | t/007util.t | 17 |
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/t/007util.t b/t/007util.t index 742c2b2d2..b32a1b90c 100644 --- a/t/007util.t +++ b/t/007util.t @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ # # Contributor(s): Zach Lipton <zach@zachlipton.com> # Max Kanat-Alexander <mkanat@bugzilla.org> - +# Frédéric Buclin <LpSolit@gmail.com> ################# #Bugzilla Test 7# @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ use lib 't'; use Support::Files; -use Test::More tests => 13; +use Test::More tests => 15; BEGIN { use_ok(Bugzilla); @@ -72,3 +72,16 @@ foreach my $input (keys %email_strings) { is(Bugzilla::Util::email_filter($input), $email_strings{$input}, "email_filter('$input')"); } + +# diff_arrays(): +my @old_array = qw(alpha beta alpha gamma gamma beta alpha delta epsilon gamma); +my @new_array = qw(alpha alpha beta gamma epsilon delta beta delta); +# The order is not relevant when comparing both arrays for matching items, +# i.e. (foo bar) and (bar foo) are the same arrays (same items). +# But when returning data, we try to respect the initial order. +# We remove the leftmost items first, and return what's left. This means: +# Removed (in this order): gamma alpha gamma. +# Added (in this order): delta +my ($removed, $added) = diff_arrays(\@old_array, \@new_array); +is_deeply($removed, [qw(gamma alpha gamma)], 'diff_array(\@old, \@new) (check removal)'); +is_deeply($added, [qw(delta)], 'diff_array(\@old, \@new) (check addition)'); |