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author | Thomas Wouters <thomas@python.org> | 2006-04-15 09:03:16 (GMT) |
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committer | Thomas Wouters <thomas@python.org> | 2006-04-15 09:03:16 (GMT) |
commit | 28bc76897757ed614dfdccbea7902043221fe141 (patch) | |
tree | a83f801a0ed826f02dd169390d939199d3cf7951 /Lib/test/test_descrtut.py | |
parent | 6caa07b23d4f838d00a9d27efc76e412549b1de9 (diff) | |
download | cpython-28bc76897757ed614dfdccbea7902043221fe141.zip cpython-28bc76897757ed614dfdccbea7902043221fe141.tar.gz cpython-28bc76897757ed614dfdccbea7902043221fe141.tar.bz2 |
- Fix doctest results to account for classes being new-style, and thus
printing differently.
- Fix doctest for classic-class behaviour, make it test new-style behaviour
on an implicitly-new-style class instead.
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib/test/test_descrtut.py')
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/test/test_descrtut.py | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py b/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py index 9dcfca1..6a5310c 100644 --- a/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py +++ b/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py @@ -265,19 +265,19 @@ implicit first argument that is the *class* for which they are invoked. ... print "classmethod", cls, y >>> C.foo(1) - classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.C'> 1 >>> c = C() >>> c.foo(1) - classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.C'> 1 >>> class D(C): ... pass >>> D.foo(1) - classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.D'> 1 >>> d = D() >>> d.foo(1) - classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.D'> 1 This prints "classmethod __main__.D 1" both times; in other words, the class passed as the first argument of foo() is the class involved in the @@ -293,11 +293,11 @@ But notice this: >>> E.foo(1) E.foo() called - classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.C'> 1 >>> e = E() >>> e.foo(1) E.foo() called - classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1 + classmethod <class 'test.test_descrtut.C'> 1 In this example, the call to C.foo() from E.foo() will see class C as its first argument, not class E. This is to be expected, since the call @@ -386,7 +386,7 @@ Method resolution order This example is implicit in the writeup. ->>> class A: # classic class +>>> class A: # implicit new-style class ... def save(self): ... print "called A.save()" >>> class B(A): @@ -398,9 +398,9 @@ This example is implicit in the writeup. ... pass >>> D().save() -called A.save() +called C.save() ->>> class A(object): # new class +>>> class A(object): # explicit new-style class ... def save(self): ... print "called A.save()" >>> class B(A): |