Documentation testing

The primary way of documenting a Rust project is through annotating the source
code. Documentation comments are written in markdown and support code
blocks in them. Rust takes care about correctness, so these code blocks are
compiled and used as tests.

  1. /// First line is a short summary describing function.
  2. ///
  3. /// The next lines present detailed documentation. Code blocks start with
  4. /// triple backquotes and have implicit `fn main()` inside
  5. /// and `extern crate <cratename>`. Assume we're testing `doccomments` crate:
  6. ///
  7. ///

/// let result = doccomments::add(2, 3);
/// assert_eq!(result, 5);
/// ```
pub fn add(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
a + b
}

/// Usually doc comments may include sections “Examples”, “Panics” and “Failures”.
///
/// The next function divides two numbers.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// /// let result = doccomments::div(10, 2); /// assert_eq!(result, 5); ///
///
/// # Panics
///
/// The function panics if the second argument is zero.
///
/// rust,should_panic /// // panics on division by zero /// doccomments::div(10, 0); ///
pub fn div(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
if b == 0 {
panic!(“Divide-by-zero error”);
}

  1. a / b

}

  1. Tests can be run with `cargo test`:
  2. ```bash
  3. $ cargo test
  4. running 0 tests
  5. test result: ok. 0 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out
  6. Doc-tests doccomments
  7. running 3 tests
  8. test src/lib.rs - add (line 7) ... ok
  9. test src/lib.rs - div (line 21) ... ok
  10. test src/lib.rs - div (line 31) ... ok
  11. test result: ok. 3 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out

Motivation behind documentation tests

The main purpose of documentation tests is to serve as an examples that exercise
the functionality, which is one of the most important
guidelines. It allows using examples from docs as
complete code snippets. But using ? makes compilation fail since main
returns unit. The ability to hide some source lines from documentation comes
to the rescue: one may write fn try_main() -> Result<(), ErrorType>, hide it and
unwrap it in hidden main. Sounds complicated? Here’s an example:

  1. /// Using hidden `try_main` in doc tests.
  2. ///
  3. ///

/// # // hidden lines start with # symbol, but they’re still compileable!
/// # fn try_main() -> Result<(), String> { // line that wraps the body shown in doc
/// let res = try::try_div(10, 2)?;
/// # Ok(()) // returning from try_main
/// # }
/// # fn main() { // starting main that’ll unwrap()
/// # try_main().unwrap(); // calling try_main and unwrapping
/// # // so that test will panic in case of error
/// # }
pub fn try_div(a: i32, b: i32) -> Result {
if b == 0 {
Err(String::from(“Divide-by-zero”))
} else {
Ok(a / b)
}
}
```

See Also