webgui/t/Macro/D_date.t
2009-10-29 10:55:09 -07:00

61 lines
1.8 KiB
Perl

#-------------------------------------------------------------------
# WebGUI is Copyright 2001-2009 Plain Black Corporation.
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
# Please read the legal notices (docs/legal.txt) and the license
# (docs/license.txt) that came with this distribution before using
# this software.
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
# http://www.plainblack.com info@plainblack.com
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
# ---- BEGIN DO NOT EDIT ----
use FindBin;
use strict;
use lib "$FindBin::Bin/../lib";
use WebGUI::Test;
use WebGUI::Session;
use WebGUI::Macro::D_date;
use Data::Dumper;
# ---- END DO NOT EDIT ----
use Test::More; # increment this value for each test you create
my $wgbday = WebGUI::Test->webguiBirthday;
my @testSets = (
{
format => '%%%c%d%h',
output =>'%August1608',
},
{
format => '',
output =>'8/16/2001 8:00 am',
},
);
my $numTests = scalar @testSets + 1;
plan tests => $numTests;
my $session = WebGUI::Test->session;
foreach my $testSet (@testSets) {
my $output = WebGUI::Macro::D_date::process($session, $testSet->{format}, $wgbday);
is($output, $testSet->{output}, 'testing '.$testSet->{format});
}
##How do you make sure that two sequential statements in perl are executed in the
##same integer second "window"? You bracket the statement in question between
##time statements and check the outside statements. If they match in time, then the
##statement is in the same window.
my ($time1, $time2) = (0,1);
my $output;
while ($time1 != $time2) {
$time1 = time();
$output = WebGUI::Macro::D_date::process($session);
$time2 = time();
}
is($output, $session->datetime->epochToHuman($time1), 'checking default time and format');