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Home/ Questions/Q 6200265
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T04:20:06+00:00 2026-05-24T04:20:06+00:00

I have a C++ function which returns a multi-line std::string . In the test-case

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I have a C++ function which returns a multi-line std::string. In the test-case for this, I compare each line against the known-value – something like:

std::string known = "good\netc";
std::string output = "bad\netc";

std::vector<std::string> knownvec;
pystring::splitlines(known, knownvec); // splits on \n

std::vector<std::string> outvec;
pystring::splitlines(output, outvec);

CHECK_EQUAL(osvec.size(), resvec.size());

for(unsigned int i = 0; i < std::min(outvec.size(), knownvec.size()); ++i)
    CHECK_EQUAL(pystring::strip(outvec[i]), pystring::strip(knownvec[i]));

This works, but say a single new-line is added, all subsequent CHECK_EQUAL assertions fail, which is make the output hard to read

Is there a better way to compare the two strings, ideally in a nice, self-contained way (i.e not linking against giantdifflib, or writing the strings to a file and calling the diff command!)

[Edit] I’m using OpenImageIO’s rather simple unittest.h

The data being compared is mainly either YAML, or colour lookup tables. Here’s an example test case – basically a few lines of headers, then lots of numbers:

 Version 1
 Format any
 Type ...
 LUT:
 Pre {
   0.0
   0.1
   ...
   1.0
 }
 3D {
   0.0
   0.1
   ...
   1.0
 }
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T04:20:08+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 4:20 am

    The easiest thing to do would be to break out of your loop when strings no longer match:

    for(unsigned int i = 0; i < std::min(outvec.size(), knownvec.size()); ++i)
    {
        bool areEqual = pystring::strip(outvec[i]) == pystring::strip(knownvec[i]);
        CHECK_EQUAL(pystring::strip(outvec[i]), pystring::strip(knownvec[i]));
        if (!areEqual)
            break;
    }
    

    If CHECK_EQUAL returns a boolean value, then you can obviously simplify the above example a bit.

    If want your unit test framework to provide the same output as diff when comparing multi-line strings, then I’m afraid you’re expecting too much out of your unit test framework. If you don’t want to link to an external library, or execute diff from within your test program, then you’ll have to program some kind of diff algorithm yourself.

    Check out this other question about information on diff algorithms and libraries.

    If you find that implementing a diff algorithm yourself is not worth the trouble (it probably isn’t), then check out the Google Diff-Match-Patch libraries.

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