Annotation to associate a wrapper suite with a non-Suite class, so it can be run via ScalaTest.
Note: This is actually an annotation defined in Java, not a Scala trait. It must be defined in Java instead of Scala so it will be accessible
at runtime. It has been inserted into Scaladoc by pretending it is a trait.
A class will be considered annotated with WrapWith if it is annotated directly or one of its superclasses (but
not supertraits) are annotated with WrapWith.
The wrapper suite must have a public, one-arg constructor that takes a Class instance whose type parameter
is compatible with the class to wrap: i.e., the class being annotated with WrapWith.
ScalaTest will load the class to wrap and construct a new instance of the wrapper suite, passing in the Class
instance for the class to wrap.
Here's an example:
Annotation to associate a wrapper suite with a non-
Suite
class, so it can be run via ScalaTest.Note: This is actually an annotation defined in Java, not a Scala trait. It must be defined in Java instead of Scala so it will be accessible at runtime. It has been inserted into Scaladoc by pretending it is a trait.
A class will be considered annotated with
WrapWith
if it is annotated directly or one of its superclasses (but not supertraits) are annotated withWrapWith
. The wrapper suite must have a public, one-arg constructor that takes aClass
instance whose type parameter is compatible with the class to wrap: i.e., the class being annotated withWrapWith
. ScalaTest will load the class to wrap and construct a new instance of the wrapper suite, passing in theClass
instance for the class to wrap. Here's an example:The
ScalaCheckPropertiesSpec
would need to have a public, no-arg constructor that accepts subclasses oforg.scalacheck.Properties
: