Does a string match a regular expression?
expect_match( object, regexp, perl = FALSE, fixed = FALSE, ..., all = TRUE, info = NULL, label = NULL )
| object | Object to test. Supports limited unquoting to make it easier to generate readable failures within a function or for loop. See quasi_label for more details. |
|---|---|
| regexp | Regular expression to test against. |
| perl | logical. Should Perl-compatible regexps be used? |
| fixed | logical. If |
| ... | Arguments passed on to
|
| all | Should all elements of actual value match |
| info | Extra information to be included in the message. This argument is soft-deprecated and should not be used in new code. Instead see alternatives in quasi_label. |
| label | Used to customise failure messages. For expert use only. |
expect_match() is a wrapper around grepl(). See its documentation for
more detail about the individual arguments.
Other expectations:
comparison-expectations,
equality-expectations,
expect_error(),
expect_length(),
expect_named(),
expect_null(),
expect_output(),
expect_reference(),
expect_silent(),
inheritance-expectations,
logical-expectations
expect_match("Testing is fun", "fun") expect_match("Testing is fun", "f.n") if (FALSE) { expect_match("Testing is fun", "horrible") # Zero-length inputs always fail expect_match(character(), ".") }