haskell-tasty-expected-failure 0.12.3-2build1 source package in Ubuntu

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haskell-tasty-expected-failure (0.12.3-2build1) noble; urgency=medium

  * Rebuild against new GHC ABI.

 -- Gianfranco Costamagna <email address hidden>  Mon, 06 Nov 2023 22:16:06 +0100

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Uploaded by:
Gianfranco Costamagna
Uploaded to:
Noble
Original maintainer:
Debian Haskell Group
Architectures:
any all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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haskell-tasty-expected-failure_0.12.3.orig.tar.gz 5.9 KiB cb07cc5ca62a6fd673ef54ae70b4bc5f9c12662fe835bea1f38b944684ee8f7e
haskell-tasty-expected-failure_0.12.3-2build1.debian.tar.xz 2.6 KiB c6c9834cf02d207db470ed7a8878a14829b3f5ce8fd8f0e966bbc077a517af55
haskell-tasty-expected-failure_0.12.3-2build1.dsc 2.8 KiB 6537afc7a8bb069b0cb2d8f5f68af3aca7a876247bd5862abe3e5c9b72435b64

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Binary packages built by this source

libghc-tasty-expected-failure-dev: mark tasty tests as failure-expected

 With the function 'expectFail' in the provided module
 Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure, you can mark that you expect
 test cases to fail, and not to pass.
 .
 This can for example be used for test-driven development: Create the
 tests, mark them with 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail', and
 you can still push to the main branch, without your continuous
 integration branch failing.
 .
 Once someone implements the feature or fixes the bug (maybe
 unknowingly), the test suite will tell him so, due to the now
 unexpectedly passing test, and he can remove the
 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail' marker.
 .
 The module also provides 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.ignoreTest' to
 avoid running a test. Both functions are implemented via the more
 general 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.wrapTest', which is also
 provided.
 .
 This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language.
 See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.

libghc-tasty-expected-failure-doc: mark tasty tests as failure-expected; documentation

 With the function 'expectFail' in the provided module
 Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure, you can mark that you expect
 test cases to fail, and not to pass.
 .
 This can for example be used for test-driven development: Create the
 tests, mark them with 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail', and
 you can still push to the main branch, without your continuous
 integration branch failing.
 .
 Once someone implements the feature or fixes the bug (maybe
 unknowingly), the test suite will tell him so, due to the now
 unexpectedly passing test, and he can remove the
 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail' marker.
 .
 The module also provides 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.ignoreTest' to
 avoid running a test. Both functions are implemented via the more
 general 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.wrapTest', which is also
 provided.
 .
 This package provides the documentation for a library for the Haskell
 programming language.
 See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.

libghc-tasty-expected-failure-prof: mark tasty tests as failure-expected; profiling libraries

 With the function 'expectFail' in the provided module
 Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure, you can mark that you expect
 test cases to fail, and not to pass.
 .
 This can for example be used for test-driven development: Create the
 tests, mark them with 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail', and
 you can still push to the main branch, without your continuous
 integration branch failing.
 .
 Once someone implements the feature or fixes the bug (maybe
 unknowingly), the test suite will tell him so, due to the now
 unexpectedly passing test, and he can remove the
 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.expectFail' marker.
 .
 The module also provides 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.ignoreTest' to
 avoid running a test. Both functions are implemented via the more
 general 'Test.Tasty.ExpectedFailure.wrapTest', which is also
 provided.
 .
 This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language, compiled
 for profiling. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.