use std::fs;
use std::process::Command;
use tempfile::NamedTempFile;
fn run_test_file(code: &str) -> Result<String, String> {
let temp_file = NamedTempFile::new().expect("Failed to create temp file");
fs::write(temp_file.path(), code).expect("Failed to write test code");
let output = Command::new("cargo")
.args(&[
"run",
"--quiet",
"--bin",
"ruchy",
"--",
"run",
temp_file.path().to_str().unwrap(),
])
.output()
.expect("Failed to run ruchy");
if output.status.success() {
Ok(String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stdout).to_string())
} else {
Err(String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stderr).to_string())
}
}
#[test]
fn test_simple_string_printing() {
let code = r#"
let s = "hello"
println(s)
"#;
let output = run_test_file(code).expect("String printing should work");
assert_eq!(output.trim(), "hello"); }
#[test]
fn test_array_printing_in_rest_pattern() {
let code = r#"
let arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
let [first, ...rest] = arr
println(rest)
"#;
let output = run_test_file(code).expect("Array printing should work now");
assert!(output.contains("[2, 3, 4, 5]")); }
#[test]
fn test_integer_printing() {
let code = r#"
let x = 42
println(x)
"#;
let output = run_test_file(code).expect("Integer printing should work");
assert_eq!(output.trim(), "42");
}