As an example, I have a simple extractor, Planex, that takes apart .plan file strings and puts them back together. I have a few unit tests on it that pretty thoroughly define its behavior. Here's the extractor:
object Planex {
def apply(metadata: String, plan: String) = {
String.format("%1$sPlan:\n%2$s", metadata, plan)
}
def unapply(str: String) = {
val ixPlanLabel = str indexOf "Plan:"
when(ixPlanLabel>=0) {
(str take ixPlanLabel, (str drop (ixPlanLabel+5)).trim)
}
}
}
I have an Actor that uses this.
class PlanRepo(env: {
val jsonFormats: Formats
val load: () => String
val planTarget: String => Unit
}) extends Actor {
implicit val jsonFormats = env.jsonFormats
def receive = {
case (metaData: String, plan: Plan) => {
val s = Planex(metaData,write(plan))
env.planTarget(s)
}
case r: PlanRequest => {
val Planex(metaData, planStr) = env.load()
self.channel ! (metaData, read[Plan](planStr))
}
}
}
From my tests on PlanRepo, I'm able to pass in all of its dependencies, except for Planex. For that, I'm still using the concrete extractor object. So my repo test is actually also testing the separately-tested behavior of Planex. Is there a way around this?
I have similar problems with a set of nested case classes defining the hierarchy of the json part of this document - I'm having trouble separating them from each other.