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Is this still maintained? #315
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It's not my current priority. If you need something soon, I suggest forking it. Transferring ownership or adding more maintainers is more work for me than would be required for me to just maintain it myself. |
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...and switch the 32-bit integer parser to just exhaustive checking. (More on that later.) Why move away from QuickCheck? 1. The maintainer appears to have little interest in actually maintaining it. BurntSushi/quickcheck#315 2. Its API is incredibly inefficient, especially on failure, and it's far too rigid for my needs. For one, I need something looser than `Arbitrary: Clone` so things like `std::io::Error` can be generated more easily. Also, with larger structures, efficiency will directly correlate to faster test runs. Also, I've run into the limitations of not being able to access the underlying random number generator far too many times to count, as I frequently need to generate random values within ranges, among other things. - BurntSushi/quickcheck#279 - BurntSushi/quickcheck#312 - BurntSushi/quickcheck#320 - BurntSushi/quickcheck#267 3. It correctly limits generated `Vec` and `String` length, but it doesn't similarly enforce limits on test length. 4. There's numerous open issues in it that I've addressed, in some cases by better core design. To name a few particularly bad ones: - Misuse of runtime bounds in `Duration` generation, `SystemTime` generation able to panic for unrelated reasons: BurntSushi/quickcheck#321 - Incorrect generation of `SystemTime`: BurntSushi/quickcheck#321 - Unbounded float shrinkers: BurntSushi/quickcheck#295 - Avoiding pointless debug string building: BurntSushi/quickcheck#303 - Signed shrinker shrinks to the most negative value, leading to occasional internal panics: BurntSushi/quickcheck#301 There's still some room for improvement, like switching away from a recursive loop: BurntSushi/quickcheck#285. But, this is good enough for my use cases right now. And this code base is structured such that such a change is *much* easier to do. (It's also considerably simpler.) As for the integer parser change, I found a way to re-structure it so I could perform true exhaustive testing on it. Every code path has every combination of inputs tested, except for memory space as a whole. This gives me enough confidence that I can ditch the randomized property checking for it.
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Hi, first of all, thanks for the library! I always enjoyed using quickcheck in Haskell and I've found that the macros you've provided make it relatively painless to quickly write quickcheck tests in Rust, even for relatively complex structs.
I have noticed that there are a number of longstanding issues and PRs open without comment by the maintainer.
@BurntSushi , I am just wondering if you are still maintaining this project? If not, would it be possible to either move the project elsewhere or assign additional maintainers so that we get some of these features/fixes merged in?
Personally I am interested in #267
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