An optional cause, the Throwable
that caused this StackDepth
exception to be thrown.
An optional cause, the Throwable
that caused this StackDepth
exception to be thrown.
A string that provides the full pathname of the source file containing the line of code that failed, suitable for presenting to a user.
A string that provides the full pathname of the source file containing the line of code that failed, suitable for presenting to a user.
a string containing the full pathname of the source file containing the line of code that caused this exception
The depth in the stack trace of this exception at which the line of test code that failed resides.
An optional detail message for this StackDepth
exception.
An optional detail message for this StackDepth
exception.
An optional source position describing the line of test code that caused this exception.
Returns an exception of the same class with failedExceptionStackDepth
set to 0 and
all frames above this stack depth severed off.
Returns an exception of the same class with failedExceptionStackDepth
set to 0 and
all frames above this stack depth severed off. This can be useful when working with tools (such as IDEs) that do not
directly support ScalaTest. (Tools that directly support ScalaTest can use the stack depth information delivered
in the StackDepth exceptions.)
A string that provides the filename of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user, which is taken from this exception's StackTraceElement
at the depth specified
by failedCodeStackDepth
.
A string that provides the filename of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user, which is taken from this exception's StackTraceElement
at the depth specified
by failedCodeStackDepth
.
This is a def
instead of a val
because exceptions are mutable: their stack trace can
be changed after the exception is created. This is done, for example, by the SeveredStackTraces
trait.
a string containing the filename that caused the failed test
A string that provides the filename and line number of the line of code that failed, suitable for presenting to a user of the failing line.
A string that provides the filename and line number of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user of the failing line. It calls failedCodeFileName
and
failedCodeLineNumber
to get the failing filename and line number.
failedCodeFileName
and failedCodeLineNumber
will fall back to exception stack trace
when Position
is not avaiable, this is the reason it is a def
instead of a val
,
because exceptions are mutable: their stack trace can be changed after the exception is created. This is done, for example,
by the SeveredStackTraces
trait.
a user-presentable string containing the filename and line number that caused the failed test
A string that provides the absolute filename and line number of the line of code that failed, suitable for presenting to a user of the failing line.
A string that provides the absolute filename and line number of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user of the failing line. It calls failedCodeFilePathname
and
failedCodeLineNumber
to get the failing absolute filename and line number.
a user-presentable string containing the absolute filename and line number that caused the failed test
A string that provides the line number of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user, which is taken from this exception's StackTraceElement
at the depth specified
by failedCodeStackDepth
.
A string that provides the line number of the line of code that failed, suitable
for presenting to a user, which is taken from this exception's StackTraceElement
at the depth specified
by failedCodeStackDepth
.
This is a def
instead of a val
because exceptions are mutable: their stack trace can
be changed after the exception is created. This is done, for example, by the SeveredStackTraces
trait.
a string containing the line number that caused the failed test
Trait that encapsulates the information required of an exception thrown by ScalaTest's assertions and matchers, which includes a stack depth at which the failing line of test code resides.
This trait exists so that it can be mixed into two exception superclasses,
StackDepthException
, from which extend several exceptions that do not depend on JUnit, andJUnitTestFailedError
, which does depend on JUnit. The latter, which requires JUnit be in the classpath, ensures failed ScalaTest assertions are reported as "failures," not "errors," by JUnit.