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author | Tim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com> | 2004-08-06 22:02:59 (GMT) |
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committer | Tim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com> | 2004-08-06 22:02:59 (GMT) |
commit | 19397e5ec549e5281b33aa5795b517006c00f64d (patch) | |
tree | 65d1fe38b4fd47d537c45f505186666c7c7b45b2 /Lib/test/test_doctest.py | |
parent | 98bd1814e24434ca9961dddc71bf21db67211ab9 (diff) | |
download | cpython-19397e5ec549e5281b33aa5795b517006c00f64d.zip cpython-19397e5ec549e5281b33aa5795b517006c00f64d.tar.gz cpython-19397e5ec549e5281b33aa5795b517006c00f64d.tar.bz2 |
Merging from tim-doctest-branch, which is now closed.
This primarily adds more powerful ways to work with unittest, including
spiffy support for building suites out of doctests in non-Python
"text files".
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib/test/test_doctest.py')
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/test/test_doctest.py | 179 |
1 files changed, 177 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_doctest.py b/Lib/test/test_doctest.py index 1062942..5cd79d5 100644 --- a/Lib/test/test_doctest.py +++ b/Lib/test/test_doctest.py @@ -11,8 +11,12 @@ import doctest def sample_func(v): """ + Blah blah + >>> print sample_func(22) 44 + + Yee ha! """ return v+v @@ -252,7 +256,7 @@ will return a single test (for that function's docstring): [<DocTest sample_func from ...:12 (1 example)>] >>> e = tests[0].examples[0] >>> print (e.source, e.want, e.lineno) - ('print sample_func(22)', '44\n', 1) + ('print sample_func(22)', '44\n', 3) >>> doctest: -ELLIPSIS # Turn ellipsis back off @@ -912,14 +916,20 @@ def test_testsource(): r""" Unit tests for `testsource()`. The testsource() function takes a module and a name, finds the (first) -test with that name in that module, and converts it to an +test with that name in that module, and converts it to a script. The +example code is converted to regular Python code. The surrounding +words and expected output are converted to comments: >>> import test.test_doctest >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.sample_func' >>> print doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name) + # Blah blah + # print sample_func(22) # Expected: # 44 + # + # Yee ha! >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.SampleNewStyleClass' >>> print doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name) @@ -975,6 +985,171 @@ Run the debugger on the docstring, and then restore sys.stdin. """ +def test_DocTestSuite(): + """DocTestSuite creates a unittest test suite into a doctest. + + We create a Suite by providing a module. A module can be provided + by passing a module object: + + >>> import unittest + >>> import test.sample_doctest + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite(test.sample_doctest) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=3> + + We can also supply the module by name: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest') + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=3> + + We can use the current module: + + >>> suite = test.sample_doctest.test_suite() + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=3> + + We can supply global variables. If we pass globs, they will be + used instead of the module globals. Here we'll pass an empty + globals, triggering an extra error: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', globs={}) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=4> + + Alternatively, we can provide extra globals. Here we'll make an + error go away by providing an extra global variable: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', + ... extraglobs={'y': 1}) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=2> + + You can pass option flags. Here we'll cause an extra error + by disabling the blank-line feature: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', + ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=4> + + You can supply setUp and teatDoen functions: + + >>> def setUp(): + ... import test.test_doctest + ... test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True + + >>> def tearDown(): + ... import test.test_doctest + ... del test.test_doctest.sillySetup + + Here, we installed a silly variable that the test expects: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', + ... setUp=setUp, tearDown=tearDown) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=7 errors=0 failures=2> + + But the tearDown restores sanity: + + >>> import test.test_doctest + >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'sillySetup' + + Finally, you can provide an alternate test finder. Here we'll + use a custom test_finder to to run just the test named bar: + + >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder( + ... namefilter=lambda prefix, base: base!='bar') + >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', + ... test_finder=finder) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=0> + + """ + +def test_DocFileSuite(): + """We can test tests found in text files using a DocFileSuite. + + We create a suite by providing the names of one or more text + files that include examples: + + >>> import unittest + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', + ... 'test_doctest2.txt') + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=2> + + The test files are looked for in the directory containing the + calling module. A package keyword argument can be provided to + specify a different relative location. + + >>> import unittest + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', + ... 'test_doctest2.txt', + ... package='test') + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=2> + + Note that '/' should be used as a path separator. It will be + converted to a native separator at run time: + + + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('../test/test_doctest.txt') + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=1> + + You can specify initial global variables: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', + ... 'test_doctest2.txt', + ... globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'}) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=1> + + In this case, we supplied a missing favorite color. You can + provide doctest options: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', + ... 'test_doctest2.txt', + ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE, + ... globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'}) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=2> + + And, you can provide setUp and tearDown functions: + + You can supply setUp and teatDoen functions: + + >>> def setUp(): + ... import test.test_doctest + ... test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True + + >>> def tearDown(): + ... import test.test_doctest + ... del test.test_doctest.sillySetup + + Here, we installed a silly variable that the test expects: + + >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', + ... 'test_doctest2.txt', + ... setUp=setUp, tearDown=tearDown) + >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult()) + <unittest.TestResult run=2 errors=0 failures=1> + + But the tearDown restores sanity: + + >>> import test.test_doctest + >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'sillySetup' + + """ + + ###################################################################### ## Main ###################################################################### |