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I care a lot about being able to automatically check _any_ property about my
program before it ever runs. However, some things don't have tests yet, either
because I don't know how to test them or because I've been lazy. I'll at least
record those here.
Startup:
- terminal log shows unit tests running
Initializing settings:
- delete app settings, start; window opens running the text editor
- quit while running the text editor, restart; window opens running the text editor in same position+dimensions
- quit while editing source (color; no selection), restart; window opens editing source in same position+dimensions
- start out running the text editor, move window, press ctrl+e twice; window is running text editor in same position+dimensions
- start out editing source, move window, press ctrl+e twice; window is editing source in same position+dimensions
- no log file; switching to source works
Code loading:
* run love with directory; text editor runs
* run love with zip file; text editor runs
* How the screen looks. Our tests use a level of indirection to check text and
graphics printed to screen, but not the precise pixels they translate to.
- where exactly the cursor is drawn to highlight a given character
- analogously, how a shape precisely looks as you draw it
* start out running the text editor, press ctrl+e to edit source, make a change to the source, press ctrl+e twice to return to the source editor; the change should be preserved.
### Other compromises
Lua is dynamically typed. Tests can't patch over lack of type-checking.
* All strings are UTF-8. Bytes within them are not characters. I try to label
byte offsets with the suffix `_offset`, and character positions as `_pos`.
For example, `string.sub` should never use a `_pos` to substring, only an
`_offset`.
* Some ADT/interface support would be helpful in keeping per-line state in
sync. Any change to line data should clear line `fragments` and
`screen_line_starting_pos`.
* Some inputs get processed in love.textinput and some in love.keypressed.
Several bugs have arisen due to destructive interference between the two for
some key chord. I wish I could guarantee that the two sets are disjoint. But
perhaps I'm not thinking about this right.
* Like any high-level language, it's easy to accidentally alias two non-scalar
variables. I wish there was a way to require copy when assigning.
* My test harness automatically runs `test_*` methods -- but only at the
top-level. I wish there was a way to raise warnings if someone defines such
a function inside a dict somewhere.
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