# ==================================================================== # # TITLE # # Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Analysis for R # # # # SOURCE # # https://github.com/msberends/AMR # # # # LICENCE # # (c) 2018-2020 Berends MS, Luz CF et al. # # Developed at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, in # # collaboration with non-profit organisations Certe Medical # # Diagnostics & Advice, and University Medical Center Groningen. # # # # This R package is free software; you can freely use and distribute # # it for both personal and commercial purposes under the terms of the # # GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GNU GPL-2), as published by # # the Free Software Foundation. # # We created this package for both routine data analysis and academic # # research and it was publicly released in the hope that it will be # # useful, but it comes WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OR LIABILITY. # # # # Visit our website for the full manual and a complete tutorial about # # how to conduct AMR analysis: https://msberends.github.io/AMR/ # # ==================================================================== # context("like.R") test_that("`like` works", { skip_on_cran() expect_true(sum("test" %like% c("^t", "^s")) == 1) expect_true("test" %like% "test") expect_false("test" %like_case% "TEST") expect_false("test" %not_like% "test") expect_true("test" %not_like_case% "TEST") expect_true(as.factor("test") %like% "TEST") expect_identical(factor(c("Test case", "Something different", "Yet another thing")) %like% c("case", "diff", "yet"), c(TRUE, TRUE, TRUE)) })