mathjs/test/function/set/setCartesian.test.js
greenkeeper[bot] c5971b371a Update standard to the latest version 🚀 (#1226)
* chore(package): update standard to version 12.0.0

* update to new lint version with --fix

I believe this mainly adds whitespace to `{}`'s.

* Replace assert.equal with assert.strictEqual

This breaks a lot of tests which I will endevour to fix in the next
commits.

* Fix most errors due to assert.strictEquals

Some instances of `strictEquals` are replaced by `deepEquals`.
`toString` has been used to make some string comparisions explicit.
Tests will still fail untill #1236 and #1237 are fixed.

* Fix assertion erros due to -0

With node 10, assert.strictEqual no longer considers `0 === -0`.
I missed these first time round as I was using node 8.

* Put toString correct side of bracket

I was converting the constructor to a string rather
than the result of the computation. Oops.

* Fixed #1236: quantileSeq has inconsistant return

* Update package-lock

* Fixed #1237: norm sometimes returning a complex number instead of number

* Fix cli tests

* More changes for standardjs, and fixes in unit tests
2018-09-08 16:33:58 +02:00

32 lines
1.5 KiB
JavaScript

// test setCartesian
const assert = require('assert')
const math = require('../../../src/main')
describe('setCartesian', function () {
it('should return the cartesian product of two sets', function () {
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([1], [3]), [[1, 3]])
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([1, 2], [3]), [[1, 3], [2, 3]])
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([1, 2], [3, 4]), [[1, 3], [1, 4], [2, 3], [2, 4]])
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([], [3, 4]), [])
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([], []), [])
})
it('should return the cartesian product of two sets with mixed content', function () {
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([1, math.complex(2, 3)], [3]), [[math.complex(2, 3), 3], [1, 3]])
})
it('should return the cartesian product of two multisets', function () {
assert.deepStrictEqual(math.setCartesian([1, 1], [3, 3]), [[1, 3], [1, 3], [1, 3], [1, 3]])
})
it('should return the same type of output as the inputs', function () {
assert.strictEqual(math.typeof(math.setCartesian([1, 2, 3], [3, 4, 5])), 'Array')
assert.strictEqual(math.typeof(math.setCartesian(math.matrix([1, 2, 3]), math.matrix([3, 4, 5]))), 'Matrix')
})
it('should throw an error in case of invalid number of arguments', function () {
assert.throws(function () { math.setCartesian() }, /TypeError: Too few arguments/)
assert.throws(function () { math.setCartesian([], [], []) }, /TypeError: Too many arguments/)
})
})