diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'test/files/neg/checksensible.check')
-rw-r--r-- | test/files/neg/checksensible.check | 10 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/test/files/neg/checksensible.check b/test/files/neg/checksensible.check index a4cf1cfe41..27d1baeebb 100644 --- a/test/files/neg/checksensible.check +++ b/test/files/neg/checksensible.check @@ -7,9 +7,11 @@ checksensible.scala:5: warning: comparing values of types scala.Ordered[scala.Un checksensible.scala:6: warning: comparing values of types scala.Unit and scala.Int using `==' will always yield false println((c = 1) == 0) ^ +actual = class Stringfalse checksensible.scala:8: warning: comparing values of types scala.Int and java.lang.String using `==' will always yield false println(1 == "abc") ^ +actual = class Booleanfalse checksensible.scala:9: warning: comparing values of types scala.Int and scala.Boolean using `!=' will always yield true println(1 != true) ^ @@ -22,7 +24,11 @@ checksensible.scala:12: warning: comparing a fresh object using `==' will always checksensible.scala:13: warning: comparing a fresh object using `!=' will always yield true println(new Array(1) != new Array(1)) ^ -checksensible.scala:20: warning: comparing values of types scala.Unit and scala.Int using `!=' will always yield true +actual = trait Nullfalse +checksensible.scala:16: warning: comparing values of types scala.Int and scala.Null using `==' will always yield false + if( foo.length == null ) // == 0 makes more sense, but still + ^ +checksensible.scala:26: warning: comparing values of types scala.Unit and scala.Int using `!=' will always yield true while((c = in.read) != -1) { ^ -9 warnings found +10 warnings found |