I wonder why Arbitrary is needed because automated property testing requires property definition, like
val prop = forAll(v: T => check that property holds for v)
and value v generator. The user guide says that you can create custom generators for custom types (a generator for trees is exemplified). Yet, it does not explain why do you need arbitraries on top of that.
Here is a piece of manual
implicit lazy val arbBool: Arbitrary[Boolean] = Arbitrary(oneOf(true, false))
To get support for your own type T you need to define an implicit def or val of type Arbitrary[T]. Use the factory method Arbitrary(...) to create the Arbitrary instance. This method takes one parameter of type Gen[T] and returns an instance of Arbitrary[T].
It clearly says that we need Arbitrary on top of Gen. Justification for arbitrary is not satisfactory, though
The arbitrary generator is the generator used by ScalaCheck when it generates values for property parameters.
IMO, to use the generators, you need to import them rather than wrapping them into arbitraries! Otherwise, one can argue that we need to wrap arbitraries also into something else to make them usable (and so on ad infinitum wrapping the wrappers endlessly).
You can also explain how does arbitrary[Int]
convert argument type into generator. It is very curious and I feel that these are related questions.