Thank you very much Ivar, that makes sense.

El miércoles, 25 de marzo de 2015, 14:22:28 (UTC-6), Ivar Nesje escribió:
>
> Good question!
>
> In 0.4 the printing for @test has been improved quite significantly to 
> display the values of variables.
>
> julia> a,b = 1,2
>
> julia> @test a==b 
> ERROR: test failed: (1 == 2) 
> in expression: a == b 
> in error at error.jl:19 
> in default_handler at test.jl:27 
> in do_test at test.jl:50 
>
> julia> @assert a==b
> ERROR: AssertionError: a == b
>
>
> There is some discussion in #10614 
> <https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/10614> about means to disable 
> assertions, so there is a conceptual difference in that assertions is used 
> inside a program to test for invalid inputs to functions, but tests are 
> usually runned externally to see that functions work correctly for 
> different outputs.
>
> Regards
> Ivar
>
> onsdag 25. mars 2015 18.26.30 UTC+1 skrev Ismael VC følgende:
>>
>> Hello guys!
>>
>> I just had someone ask me this question and I didn't know what to answer 
>> him, example:
>>
>> julia> using Base.Test
>>
>> julia> @test 1 == 1
>>
>> julia> @test 1 == 3
>> ERROR: test failed: 1 == 3
>>  in error at error.jl:21 (repeats 2 times)
>>
>> julia> @assert 1 == 1
>>
>> julia> @assert 1 == 3
>> ERROR: assertion failed: 1 == 3
>>  in error at error.jl:21 (repeats 2 times)
>>
>> I fail to see the difference, besides that `@test` conveys the idea of 
>> "testing". 
>>
>> Even the error message is even the same:  `in error at error.jl:21 
>> (repeats 2 times)`
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>

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