diff --git a/docs/why-catch.md b/docs/why-catch.md index b77ca2c2..1dbc43bc 100644 --- a/docs/why-catch.md +++ b/docs/why-catch.md @@ -6,27 +6,27 @@ So what does Catch bring to the party that differentiates it from these? Apart f ## Key Features -* Really easy to get started. Just download catch.hpp, #include it and you're away. -* No external dependencies. As long as you can compile C++98 and have a C++ standard library available. -* Write test cases as, self-registering, functions or methods. -* Divide test cases into sections, each of which is run in isolation (eliminates the need for fixtures!) +* Really easy to get started. Just download catch.hpp, `#include` it and you're away. +* No external dependencies. As long as you can compile C++11 and have a C++ standard library available. +* Write test cases as, self-registering, functions (or methods, if you prefer). +* Divide test cases into sections, each of which is run in isolation (eliminates the need for fixtures). * Use BDD-style Given-When-Then sections as well as traditional unit test cases. * Only one core assertion macro for comparisons. Standard C/C++ operators are used for the comparison - yet the full expression is decomposed and lhs and rhs values are logged. +* Tests are named using free-form strings - no more couching names in legal identifiers. ## Other core features -* Tests are named using free-form strings - no more couching names in legal identifiers. * Tests can be tagged for easily running ad-hoc groups of tests. * Failures can (optionally) break into the debugger on Windows and Mac. * Output is through modular reporter objects. Basic textual and XML reporters are included. Custom reporters can easily be added. * JUnit xml output is supported for integration with third-party tools, such as CI servers. -* A default main() function is provided (in a header), but you can supply your own for complete control (e.g. integration into your own test runner GUI). +* A default main() function is provided, but you can supply your own for complete control (e.g. integration into your own test runner GUI). * A command line parser is provided and can still be used if you choose to provided your own main() function. * Catch can test itself. * Alternative assertion macro(s) report failures but don't abort the test case * Floating point tolerance comparisons are built in using an expressive Approx() syntax. * Internal and friendly macros are isolated so name clashes can be managed -* Support for Matchers (early stages) +* Matchers ## Objective-C-specific features @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ So what does Catch bring to the party that differentiates it from these? Apart f See the list of [open source projects using Catch](opensource-users.md). -See the [tutorial](tutorial.md) to get more of a taste of using CATCH in practice +See the [tutorial](tutorial.md) to get more of a taste of using Catch in practice ---