Unit Test Results

Designed for use with JUnit and Ant .

Summary

TestsFailuresErrorsSuccess rateTime
2031099.51%40.597
Note: failures are anticipated and checked for with assertions while errors are unanticipated.

Packages

Note: package statistics are not computed recursively, they only sum up all of its testsuites numbers.
NameTestsErrorsFailuresTime(s)
org.eclipse.jst.jsp.core.tests2030140.597

Package org.eclipse.jst.jsp.core.tests

NameTestsErrorsFailuresTime(s)
JSPCoreTestSuite2030140.597
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TestCase JSPCoreTestSuite

NameStatusTypeTime(s)
testCleanupInsertTagsQuoteAttrsSuccess1.456
testCleanupInsertTagsSuccess0.173
testCleanupCompressEmptyElementTagsSuccess0.256
testCleanupHTMLFailureCleaned up document differs from the expected. Expected Contents: <HTML> <HEAD> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" /> <META name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.72 [en] (Windows NT 5.0; U) [Netscape]" /> <TITLE></TITLE> </HEAD> This is a page of some of the technical stuff that I've written using various programming languages. Click on the links to learn more about the projects or to see the source code.<BR> <I>Note: Feel free to copy, steal, modify, destroy what you will...</I><BR><BR> <HR> <H2> Programs and Utilities </H2> <UL> <LI><A href="makemake.html"> <I> Automatic Makefile Utility: </I></A> This generates a Makefile and updates it according to the files currently in your directory. Take a gander at the source here: <A href="makemake.c"> <I> makemake.c </I></A> <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="mailsort.pl" > <I> mail file sorter: </I> </A> This utility parses a mail file and creates another mail file containing only the messages specified by paramaters. For example, parse a mail archive file (old-mail-Jan-2000) and extract all of the messages from davek@yourmom.com or with the subject Marillion. This guy was whipped up in Perl. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="electronicNotes.html" > <I> Electronic Notes: </I> </A> This is an original idea (gasp!) that I developed which is a system for keeping little reminders to yourself during the day and having them sent to you all in one convenient file via email at the end of the day. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="header.html" > <I> C/C++ Header file to Implementation file converter: </I> </A> This is a very useful tool written in C++ that converts .h files to empty implementation (.C) files. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="matrix.html" > <I> Matrix Manipulation Package: </I></A> This is a package that does all sorts of cool manipulations with matrices, such as Gaussian Elimination, Normal Equations, Vandermonde Matrices, Cholesky Factorization, Error Analysis, and more stuff than you would ever want to do with a matrix. It is written in good ol' C. <BR ><BR > </LI><LI> <A href="lisp.html" > <I>Set Operations: </I></A> <I></I> A program that performs set operations on a list. This is written in Lisp, of all things. There's also some examples of my own interpretations of some Lisp functions. Lisp is a good language for AI and things of that nature. It relies heavily on recursion, so it takes a different mindset to program in this language. But used correctly and for its intended purpose, Lisp is a very unique and powerful programming language. <BR ><BR > </LI><LI> <A href="loc.html" > <I> Lines Of Code Counter: </I></A><I></I> This is is LOC counter that I wrote in Perl that calculates the number of uncommented lines of code in a program. This works for any programming language as you can supply the comment character on the command line. This is an extremely useful program for use in software metrics. <BR abc="def"><BR abc="def" > </LI><LI><A href="linwin.html"> <I> Simple *nix to windows text converter </I></A> This takes files written in Linux (and in vi or an editor with automatic line breaks after every 80 or so chars) and formats it so it will display properly in Windows environment should you be forced to do so. Peruse (peruse, mind you. I don't want to see any <I>browsing</I>) the source here: <A href="linwin.c"> <I> linwin.c </I></A> <BR abc = "def"><BR abc = "def"> </LI><LI><B> Regression and Standard Deviation: </B> A math class written in Java using Object Oriented design principles. The main aspects of the program are for figuring out Standard Deviation and the Regression, when you input a set of x and y values. Regression calculations are often used in Software Metrics to to help in estimating length of code, and time spent on the project.<BR> <A href="RegressionCalc.html" > <I> RegressionCalc.java </I> </A> This is the main class that does the calculations. It calculates B1, B0, and r^2, which are all parameters of Regression. <BR abc= "def"> <A href="MathClass.html" > <I> MathClass.java </I> </A> This is simply a small class which calculates the mean and the standard deviation of a vector of numbers. This is used by the RegressionCalc class in its calculations. <BR abc ="def"> <A href="Regression.html" > <I> Regression.java </I> </A> This is basically the main routine, or where the program starts. It puts all of the input from the command line into two separate vectors for the x and y values.<BR><BR> An example of the usage of this program would be: <BR> If you had a history of data on your estimated Lines Of Code (LOC) per class, as well as the actual LOC per class, you could put these in the formula and find out the Regression of the data (or how far away each point is from the function line.) You would input the data for the estimated LOC, separated by a comma, and followed by the actual LOC. The result would be the regression calculation. <PRE> %java Regression 130 650 99 150 , 186 699 132 272 X Data = [ 130.0 650.0 99.0 150.0 ] Y Data = [ 186.0 699.0 132.0 272.0 ] N = 4 Beta0 = 72.6905030780361 Beta1 = 0.9701049443030667 rSquared = 2212.504697673689 </PRE> </LI></UL> <HR> <H2> Knowledge </H2> <UL> <LI><A href="vim.html"> <I> Espousing my love for vim! </I></A> vim just rocks, okay. Really. If I had to choose between, like, sex, or using vim--let's just say I'd be one masterful-editing monk. <BR><BR> </LI><LI> <A href="MBR-LILO.txt"> <I> Lost LILO? Recover.</I> </A> If you have Linux installed in a multi-boot environment, and you overwrite your MBR, you can lose LILO. I reinstalled Windows (hey, I needed to play Final Fantasy VIII!) and couldn't boot into Linux. Here's how I recovered. <BR><BR> </LI></UL><BODY></BODY> </HTML><HTML> </HTML> Actual Contents: <HTML> <HEAD> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" /> <META name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.72 [en] (Windows NT 5.0; U) [Netscape]" /> <TITLE></TITLE> </HEAD> This is a page of some of the technical stuff that I've written using various programming languages. Click on the links to learn more about the projects or to see the source code.<BR> <I>Note: Feel free to copy, steal, modify, destroy what you will...</I><BR><BR> <HR> <H2> Programs and Utilities </H2> <UL> <LI><A href="makemake.html"> <I> Automatic Makefile Utility: </I></A> This generates a Makefile and updates it according to the files currently in your directory. Take a gander at the source here: <A href="makemake.c"> <I> makemake.c </I></A> <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="mailsort.pl" > <I> mail file sorter: </I> </A> This utility parses a mail file and creates another mail file containing only the messages specified by paramaters. For example, parse a mail archive file (old-mail-Jan-2000) and extract all of the messages from davek@yourmom.com or with the subject Marillion. This guy was whipped up in Perl. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="electronicNotes.html" > <I> Electronic Notes: </I> </A> This is an original idea (gasp!) that I developed which is a system for keeping little reminders to yourself during the day and having them sent to you all in one convenient file via email at the end of the day. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="header.html" > <I> C/C++ Header file to Implementation file converter: </I> </A> This is a very useful tool written in C++ that converts .h files to empty implementation (.C) files. <BR><BR> </LI><LI><A href="matrix.html" > <I> Matrix Manipulation Package: </I></A> This is a package that does all sorts of cool manipulations with matrices, such as Gaussian Elimination, Normal Equations, Vandermonde Matrices, Cholesky Factorization, Error Analysis, and more stuff than you would ever want to do with a matrix. It is written in good ol' C. <BR ><BR > </LI><LI> <A href="lisp.html" > <I>Set Operations: </I></A> <I></I> A program that performs set operations on a list. This is written in Lisp, of all things. There's also some examples of my own interpretations of some Lisp functions. Lisp is a good language for AI and things of that nature. It relies heavily on recursion, so it takes a different mindset to program in this language. But used correctly and for its intended purpose, Lisp is a very unique and powerful programming language. <BR ><BR > </LI><LI> <A href="loc.html" > <I> Lines Of Code Counter: </I></A><I></I> This is is LOC counter that I wrote in Perl that calculates the number of uncommented lines of code in a program. This works for any programming language as you can supply the comment character on the command line. This is an extremely useful program for use in software metrics. <BR abc="def"><BR abc="def" > </LI><LI><A href="linwin.html"> <I> Simple *nix to windows text converter </I></A> This takes files written in Linux (and in vi or an editor with automatic line breaks after every 80 or so chars) and formats it so it will display properly in Windows environment should you be forced to do so. Peruse (peruse, mind you. I don't want to see any <I>browsing</I>) the source here: <A href="linwin.c"> <I> linwin.c </I></A> <BR abc = "def"><BR abc = "def"> </LI><LI><B> Regression and Standard Deviation: </B> A math class written in Java using Object Oriented design principles. The main aspects of the program are for figuring out Standard Deviation and the Regression, when you input a set of x and y values. Regression calculations are often used in Software Metrics to to help in estimating length of code, and time spent on the project.<BR> <A href="RegressionCalc.html" > <I> RegressionCalc.java </I> </A> This is the main class that does the calculations. It calculates B1, B0, and r^2, which are all parameters of Regression. <BR abc= "def"> <A href="MathClass.html" > <I> MathClass.java </I> </A> This is simply a small class which calculates the mean and the standard deviation of a vector of numbers. This is used by the RegressionCalc class in its calculations. <BR abc ="def"> <A href="Regression.html" > <I> Regression.java </I> </A> This is basically the main routine, or where the program starts. It puts all of the input from the command line into two separate vectors for the x and y values.<BR><BR> An example of the usage of this program would be: <BR> If you had a history of data on your estimated Lines Of Code (LOC) per class, as well as the actual LOC per class, you could put these in the formula and find out the Regression of the data (or how far away each point is from the function line.) You would input the data for the estimated LOC, separated by a comma, and followed by the actual LOC. The result would be the regression calculation. <PRE> %java Regression 130 650 99 150 , 186 699 132 272 X Data = [ 130.0 650.0 99.0 150.0 ] Y Data = [ 186.0 699.0 132.0 272.0 ] N = 4 Beta0 = 72.6905030780361 Beta1 = 0.9701049443030667 rSquared = 2212.504697673689 </PRE> </LI></UL> <HR> <H2> Knowledge </H2> <UL> <LI><A href="vim.html"> <I> Espousing my love for vim! </I></A> vim just rocks, okay. Really. If I had to choose between, like, sex, or using vim--let's just say I'd be one masterful-editing monk. <BR><BR> </LI><LI> <A href="MBR-LILO.txt"> <I> Lost LILO? Recover.</I> </A> If you have Linux installed in a multi-boot environment, and you overwrite your MBR, you can lose LILO. I reinstalled Windows (hey, I needed to play Final Fantasy VIII!) and couldn't boot into Linux. Here's how I recovered. <BR><BR> </LI></UL><BODY></BODY> <HTML> </HTML></HTML>

junit.framework.AssertionFailedError: Cleaned up document differs from the expected.
Expected Contents:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
<META name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.72 [en] (Windows NT 5.0; U) [Netscape]" />
<TITLE></TITLE>
</HEAD>

This is a page of some of the technical stuff that I've written using various
to see the source code.<BR>
<I>Note: Feel free to copy, steal, modify, destroy what you will...</I><BR><BR>
<HR>

<H2> Programs and Utilities </H2>
<UL>
<LI><A href="makemake.html"> <I> Automatic
Makefile Utility: </I></A> This generates a Makefile and updates it according
to the files currently in your directory.
Take a gander at the source here: <A
href="makemake.c"> <I> makemake.c
</I></A>

<BR><BR>
</LI><LI><A href="mailsort.pl" > <I>
mail file sorter: </I> </A>
This utility parses a mail file and creates another mail file containing only
the messages specified by paramaters. For example, parse a mail archive file
(old-mail-Jan-2000) and extract all of the messages from davek@yourmom.com or
with the subject Marillion. This guy was whipped up in Perl.
<BR><BR>

</LI><LI><A href="electronicNotes.html" > <I>
Electronic Notes: </I> </A> This is an original idea (gasp!) that I developed which is a
system for keeping little reminders to yourself during the day and having them
sent to you all in one convenient file via email at the end of the day.
<BR><BR>

</LI><LI><A href="header.html" > <I> C/C++ Header file
to Implementation file converter: </I> </A>
This is a very useful tool written in C++ that converts .h files to empty
implementation (.C) files.
<BR><BR>
</LI><LI><A href="matrix.html" > <I> Matrix Manipulation
Package: </I></A> This is a package that does all sorts of cool manipulations
with matrices, such as Gaussian Elimination, Normal Equations, Vandermonde
ever want to do with a matrix. It is written in good ol' C.

<BR ><BR >
</LI><LI>
<A href="lisp.html" > <I>Set Operations: </I></A> <I></I> A program that performs set
operations on a list. This is written in Lisp, of all things. There's also
some examples of my own interpretations of some Lisp functions. Lisp is a good
language for AI and things of that nature.
It relies heavily on recursion, so it takes a different
mindset to program in this language. But used correctly and for its intended
purpose, Lisp is a very unique and powerful programming language.
<BR ><BR >

</LI><LI>
<A href="loc.html" > <I> Lines Of Code Counter:
</I></A><I></I> This is is LOC counter that I wrote in Perl that calculates the number of
uncommented lines of code in a program. This works for any programming
language as you can supply the comment character on the command line. This is
an extremely useful program for use in software metrics.
<BR abc="def"><BR abc="def" >

</LI><LI><A href="linwin.html"> <I> Simple *nix to
windows text converter </I></A> This takes files written in Linux (and in vi or
an editor with automatic line breaks after every 80 or so chars) and
formats it so it will display properly in Windows environment should you be
forced to do so.
Peruse (peruse, mind you. I don't want to see any <I>browsing</I>) the source here: <A
href="linwin.c"> <I> linwin.c
</I></A>
<BR abc = "def"><BR abc = "def">


</LI><LI><B> Regression and Standard Deviation: </B>
A math class written in Java using Object Oriented design principles. The main
aspects of the program are for figuring out Standard Deviation and the
Regression, when you input a set of x and y values. Regression calculations
are often used in Software Metrics to to help in estimating length of code, and
time spent on the project.<BR>

<A href="RegressionCalc.html" >
<I> RegressionCalc.java </I> </A> This is the main class that does the
calculations. It calculates B1, B0, and r^2, which are all parameters of
Regression.
<BR abc= "def">
<A href="MathClass.html" >
<I> MathClass.java </I> </A> This is simply a small class which calculates the
mean and the standard deviation of a vector of numbers. This is used by the
RegressionCalc class in its calculations.
<BR abc ="def">
<A href="Regression.html" >
<I> Regression.java </I> </A> This is basically the main routine, or where the
program starts. It puts all of the input from the command line into two
separate vectors for the x and y values.<BR><BR>

An example of the usage of this program would be: <BR>
If you had a history of data on your estimated Lines Of Code (LOC) per class,
as well as the actual LOC per class, you could put these in the formula and
find out the Regression of the data (or how far away each point is from the
function line.)

You would input the data for the estimated LOC, separated by a comma, and
followed by the actual LOC. The result would be the regression calculation.
<PRE>
%java Regression 130 650 99 150 , 186 699 132 272

X Data = [ 130.0 650.0 99.0 150.0 ]
Y Data = [ 186.0 699.0 132.0 272.0 ]
N = 4
Beta0 = 72.6905030780361
Beta1 = 0.9701049443030667
rSquared = 2212.504697673689
</PRE>

</LI></UL>

<HR>
<H2> Knowledge </H2>
<UL>
<LI><A href="vim.html"> <I> Espousing my love
for vim! </I></A> vim just rocks, okay. Really. If I had to choose between,
like, sex, or using vim--let's just say I'd be one masterful-editing monk.
<BR><BR>


</LI><LI>
<A href="MBR-LILO.txt">
<I> Lost LILO? Recover.</I> </A> If you have Linux installed in a multi-boot
environment, and you overwrite your MBR, you can lose LILO. I reinstalled
Windows (hey, I needed to play Final Fantasy VIII!) and couldn't boot into
Linux. Here's how I recovered.
<BR><BR>



</LI></UL><BODY></BODY>
</HTML><HTML>
</HTML>
Actual Contents:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
<META name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.72 [en] (Windows NT 5.0; U) [Netscape]" />
<TITLE></TITLE>
</HEAD>

This is a page of some of the technical stuff that I've written using various
to see the source code.<BR>
<I>Note: Feel free to copy, steal, modify, destroy what you will...</I><BR><BR>
<HR>

<H2> Programs and Utilities </H2>
<UL>
<LI><A href="makemake.html"> <I> Automatic
Makefile Utility: </I></A> This generates a Makefile and updates it according
to the files currently in your directory.
Take a gander at the source here: <A
href="makemake.c"> <I> makemake.c
</I></A>

<BR><BR>
</LI><LI><A href="mailsort.pl" > <I>
mail file sorter: </I> </A>
This utility parses a mail file and creates another mail file containing only
the messages specified by paramaters. For example, parse a mail archive file
(old-mail-Jan-2000) and extract all of the messages from davek@yourmom.com or
with the subject Marillion. This guy was whipped up in Perl.
<BR><BR>

</LI><LI><A href="electronicNotes.html" > <I>
Electronic Notes: </I> </A> This is an original idea (gasp!) that I developed which is a
system for keeping little reminders to yourself during the day and having them
sent to you all in one convenient file via email at the end of the day.
<BR><BR>

</LI><LI><A href="header.html" > <I> C/C++ Header file
to Implementation file converter: </I> </A>
This is a very useful tool written in C++ that converts .h files to empty
implementation (.C) files.
<BR><BR>
</LI><LI><A href="matrix.html" > <I> Matrix Manipulation
Package: </I></A> This is a package that does all sorts of cool manipulations
with matrices, such as Gaussian Elimination, Normal Equations, Vandermonde
ever want to do with a matrix. It is written in good ol' C.

<BR ><BR >
</LI><LI>
<A href="lisp.html" > <I>Set Operations: </I></A> <I></I> A program that performs set
operations on a list. This is written in Lisp, of all things. There's also
some examples of my own interpretations of some Lisp functions. Lisp is a good
language for AI and things of that nature.
It relies heavily on recursion, so it takes a different
mindset to program in this language. But used correctly and for its intended
purpose, Lisp is a very unique and powerful programming language.
<BR ><BR >

</LI><LI>
<A href="loc.html" > <I> Lines Of Code Counter:
</I></A><I></I> This is is LOC counter that I wrote in Perl that calculates the number of
uncommented lines of code in a program. This works for any programming
language as you can supply the comment character on the command line. This is
an extremely useful program for use in software metrics.
<BR abc="def"><BR abc="def" >

</LI><LI><A href="linwin.html"> <I> Simple *nix to
windows text converter </I></A> This takes files written in Linux (and in vi or
an editor with automatic line breaks after every 80 or so chars) and
formats it so it will display properly in Windows environment should you be
forced to do so.
Peruse (peruse, mind you. I don't want to see any <I>browsing</I>) the source here: <A
href="linwin.c"> <I> linwin.c
</I></A>
<BR abc = "def"><BR abc = "def">


</LI><LI><B> Regression and Standard Deviation: </B>
A math class written in Java using Object Oriented design principles. The main
aspects of the program are for figuring out Standard Deviation and the
Regression, when you input a set of x and y values. Regression calculations
are often used in Software Metrics to to help in estimating length of code, and
time spent on the project.<BR>

<A href="RegressionCalc.html" >
<I> RegressionCalc.java </I> </A> This is the main class that does the
calculations. It calculates B1, B0, and r^2, which are all parameters of
Regression.
<BR abc= "def">
<A href="MathClass.html" >
<I> MathClass.java </I> </A> This is simply a small class which calculates the
mean and the standard deviation of a vector of numbers. This is used by the
RegressionCalc class in its calculations.
<BR abc ="def">
<A href="Regression.html" >
<I> Regression.java </I> </A> This is basically the main routine, or where the
program starts. It puts all of the input from the command line into two
separate vectors for the x and y values.<BR><BR>

An example of the usage of this program would be: <BR>
If you had a history of data on your estimated Lines Of Code (LOC) per class,
as well as the actual LOC per class, you could put these in the formula and
find out the Regression of the data (or how far away each point is from the
function line.)

You would input the data for the estimated LOC, separated by a comma, and
followed by the actual LOC. The result would be the regression calculation.
<PRE>
%java Regression 130 650 99 150 , 186 699 132 272

X Data = [ 130.0 650.0 99.0 150.0 ]
Y Data = [ 186.0 699.0 132.0 272.0 ]
N = 4
Beta0 = 72.6905030780361
Beta1 = 0.9701049443030667
rSquared = 2212.504697673689
</PRE>

</LI></UL>

<HR>
<H2> Knowledge </H2>
<UL>
<LI><A href="vim.html"> <I> Espousing my love
for vim! </I></A> vim just rocks, okay. Really. If I had to choose between,
like, sex, or using vim--let's just say I'd be one masterful-editing monk.
<BR><BR>


</LI><LI>
<A href="MBR-LILO.txt">
<I> Lost LILO? Recover.</I> </A> If you have Linux installed in a multi-boot
environment, and you overwrite your MBR, you can lose LILO. I reinstalled
Windows (hey, I needed to play Final Fantasy VIII!) and couldn't boot into
Linux. Here's how I recovered.
<BR><BR>



</LI></UL><BODY></BODY>
<HTML>
</HTML></HTML>
at org.eclipse.jst.jsp.core.tests.cleanupformat.CleanupTester.compare(CleanupTester.java:336)
at org.eclipse.jst.jsp.core.tests.cleanupformat.CleanupTester.testCleanupHTML(CleanupTester.java:166)
at org.eclipse.test.EclipseTestRunner.run(EclipseTestRunner.java:354)
at org.eclipse.test.EclipseTestRunner.run(EclipseTestRunner.java:206)
at org.eclipse.test.CoreTestApplication.runTests(CoreTestApplication.java:35)
at org.eclipse.test.CoreTestApplication.run(CoreTestApplication.java:31)
at org.eclipse.equinox.internal.app.EclipseAppContainer.callMethodWithException(EclipseAppContainer.java:574)
at org.eclipse.equinox.internal.app.EclipseAppHandle.run(EclipseAppHandle.java:195)
at org.eclipse.core.runtime.internal.adaptor.EclipseAppLauncher.runApplication(EclipseAppLauncher.java:110)
at org.eclipse.core.runtime.internal.adaptor.EclipseAppLauncher.start(EclipseAppLauncher.java:79)
at org.eclipse.core.runtime.adaptor.EclipseStarter.run(EclipseStarter.java:386)
at org.eclipse.core.runtime.adaptor.EclipseStarter.run(EclipseStarter.java:179)
at org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.Main.invokeFramework(Main.java:549)
at org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.Main.basicRun(Main.java:504)
at org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.Main.run(Main.java:1236)
at org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.Main.main(Main.java:1212)
0.475
testCleanupHTMLtwiceSuccess0.140
testFormat261968Success0.091
testFormatTagOpenSuccess0.036
testFormatTagOpenTagCloseSuccess0.045
testFormatTagsSuccess0.052
testFormatEmptySuccess0.020
testFormatOneSpaceSuccess0.026
testFormatOneCharSuccess0.022
testFormatSpacesSuccess0.028
testFormatCharsSuccess0.026
testFormatSpacesAndCharsSuccess0.027
testFormatSuccess0.134
testFormatSplitLinesSplitMultiAttrsSuccess0.112
testFormatSplitLinesSuccess0.093
testFormatBlockCommentsSuccess0.122
testFormatInlineCommentsSuccess0.068
testFormatInlineCommentsSplitLinesSplitMultiAttrsSuccess0.073
testHTMLFormatSuccess0.142
testCloneStructuredDocumentXMLSuccess0.001
testCloneStructuredDocumentJSPSuccess0.062
testCloneStructuredDocumentJSPXMLSuccess0.160
testCreationSuccess0.000
testCSSExistsSuccess0.001
testCSSExistsFromFilenameSuccess0.000
testDTDExistsSuccess0.001
testDTDExistsFromFilenameSuccess0.000
testHTMLExistsSuccess0.000
testHTMLExistsFromFilenameSuccess0.001
testJSPExistsSuccess0.000
testJSPExistsFromFilenameSuccess0.000
testXMLExistsSuccess0.000
testXMLExistsFromFilenameSuccess0.001
testDirtyStateForEmbeddedContentTypeTextHTMLSuccess0.580
testDirtyStateForEmbeddedContentTypeTextCSSSuccess0.087
testDirtyStateForEmbeddedContentTypeTextXMLSuccess0.163
testDirtyStateForEmbeddedContentTypeSubXMLSuccess0.105
testDirtyStateForDefaultEmbeddedContentTypeSuccess0.066
testDirtyStateWithNoPageDirectiveSuccess0.061
testCreationSuccess0.001
testXMLExistsSuccess0.001
testHTMLExistsSuccess0.000
testJSPExistsSuccess0.001
testCSSExistsSuccess0.000
testDTDExistsSuccess0.001
testXMLExistsByFileExtensionSuccess0.012
testHTMLExistsByFileExtensionSuccess0.002
testJSPExistsByFileExtensionSuccess0.001
testCSSExistsByFileExtensionSuccess0.050
testDTDExistsByFileExtensionSuccess0.002
testMultipleDefinitionsSuccess0.001
testModelManagerSuccess0.128
testNullArgumentSuccess0.000
testFormat261968Success0.593
testFormatTagOpenSuccess0.035
testFormatTagOpenTagCloseSuccess0.027
testFormatTagsSuccess0.071
testFormatEmptySuccess0.023
testFormatOneSpaceSuccess0.026
testFormatOneCharSuccess0.026
testFormatSpacesSuccess0.022
testFormatCharsSuccess0.016
testFormatSpacesAndCharsSuccess0.015
testFormatSuccess0.053
testFormatSplitLinesSplitMultiAttrsSuccess0.090
testFormatSplitLinesSuccess0.053
testFormatBlockCommentsSuccess0.068
testFormatInlineCommentsSuccess0.084
testFormatInlineCommentsSplitLinesSplitMultiAttrsSuccess0.053
testHTMLFormatSuccess0.065
testJSPModelSuccess0.001
testJSPModelSuccess0.001
testBug116066_1Success0.874
testBug116066_2Success0.060
test144807_AttrNameSuccess0.013
test144807_AttrValueSuccess0.011
test144807_EqualsSuccess0.011
testInsertCommentSuccess0.039
test26004Success0.001
test150794Success0.000
test265380Success0.557
test_107338Success5.012
test_126377Success1.559
test_174042Success3.593
test_178443Success3.026
test_109721Success3.306
test_181057aSuccess3.180
test_219761aSuccess3.015
test_150794Success0.224
testContentModelSingleLineIncludedFileWithNoSpacesButWithTaglibInIncludeSuccess1.023
testTranslateMultiLineIncludedFileWithSpacesAndScriptletInIncludeSuccess0.694
testTranslateSingleLineIncludedFileWithNoSpacesButScriptletInIncludeSuccess1.818
testBundleGetPreferencesSuccess0.001
testPluginGetDefaultPreferencesSuccess0.001
testPluginSetPreferencesSuccess0.000
testDelimiterPreferencesSuccess0.001
testSourceOpen1Success0.674
testSourceAppend1Success0.092
testSourceInsert1Success0.078
testSourceOpen2Success0.048
testSourceAppend2Success0.089
testSourceOpen3Success0.004
testSourceAppend3Success0.085
testSourceOpen4Success0.004
testSourceAppend4Success0.076
testSourceInsert4Success0.151
testSourceOpen5Success0.003
testSourceAppend5Success0.085
testSourceInsert5Success0.107
testSourceOpen6Success0.095
testSourceAppend6Success0.073
testSourceOpen7Success0.003
testSourceAppend7Success0.075
testSourceInsert7Success0.074
testSourceOpen8Success0.004
testSourceAppend8Success0.013
testSourceOpen9Success0.002
testSourceAppend9Success0.013
testSourceOpen10Success0.002
testSourceAppend10Success0.009
testSourceInsert10Success0.009
testSourceOpen11Success0.002
testSourceAppend11Success0.011
testSourceInsert11Success0.014
testSourceOpen12Success0.003
testSourceAppend12Success0.010
testSourceOpen13Success0.002
testSourceAppend13Success0.001
testSourceInsert13Success0.001
testSourceOpen14Success0.002
testSourceAppend14Success0.002
testSourceInsert14Success0.001
testSourceOpen15Success0.002
testSourceInsert15Success0.026
testSourceAppend15Success0.022
testSourceOpen16Success0.001
testSourceInsert16Success0.014
testSourceAppend16Success0.014
testValidatingFragmentsSuccess0.163
testNoValidatingFragmentsSuccess0.430
testImportedCommentsSuccess0.044
testAttributesOnJSP11ForwardSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnJSP11GetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11IncludeSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11IncludeDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11PageDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11ParamSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnJSP11PluginSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11RootSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11SetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP11TaglibDirectiveSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnJSP11UseBeanSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20AttributeSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20ElementSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20ForwardSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20GetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20IncludeSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20IncludeDirectiveSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnJSP20OutputSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20PageDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20ParamSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20PluginSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20RootSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnJSP20SetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20TaglibDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnJSP20UseBeanSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20AttributeSuccess0.005
testAttributesOnTAG20AttributeDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20DoBodySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20ElementSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20ForwardSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20GetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20IncludeSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20IncludeDirectiveSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnTAG20InvokeSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20OutputSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20ParamSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20PluginSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20RootSuccess0.001
testAttributesOnTAG20SetPropertySuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20TagDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20TaglibDirectiveSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20UseBeanSuccess0.000
testAttributesOnTAG20VariableDirectiveSuccess0.001
testCHTMLdocumentSuccess0.010
testHTML4documentSuccess0.028
testJSP11documentSuccess0.001
testJSP12documentSuccess0.000
testJSP20documentSuccess0.000
testTag20documentSuccess0.001
testLoadCustomTagsThroughJSPSyntaxSuccess0.540
testLoadCustomTagsThroughXMLSyntaxSuccess0.009
testTagFileReferencedInTLDSuccess0.731
testUknownAttributeSuccess0.193
testMissingRequiredAttributeSuccess0.006
testAttributesCorrectSuccess0.006
testNonEmptyInlineTagSuccess0.006
testValidating2FilesSuccess0.093
testFragmentValidationPreferenceOnProjectSuccess0.433
testFragmentValidationPreferenceOnWorkspaceSuccess1.261
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