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		c4cacc8c5e
		
	
	
	
	
		
			
			* Fix typos in comments, docs and test names * Update test_pyparse.py account for change in string length * Apply suggestion: splitable -> splittable Co-Authored-By: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> * Apply suggestion: splitable -> splittable Co-Authored-By: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> * Apply suggestion: Dealloccte -> Deallocate Co-Authored-By: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> * Update posixmodule checksum. * Reverse idlelib changes.
		
			
				
	
	
		
			3034 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			96 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			3034 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			96 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
| """
 | |
| Test script for doctest.
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| from test import support
 | |
| import doctest
 | |
| import functools
 | |
| import os
 | |
| import sys
 | |
| import importlib
 | |
| import unittest
 | |
| import tempfile
 | |
| 
 | |
| # NOTE: There are some additional tests relating to interaction with
 | |
| #       zipimport in the test_zipimport_support test module.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| ## Sample Objects (used by test cases)
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| 
 | |
| def sample_func(v):
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Blah blah
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> print(sample_func(22))
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|     44
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Yee ha!
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return v+v
 | |
| 
 | |
| class SampleClass:
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     >>> print(1)
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|     1
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| 
 | |
|     >>> # comments get ignored.  so are empty PS1 and PS2 prompts:
 | |
|     >>>
 | |
|     ...
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| 
 | |
|     Multiline example:
 | |
|     >>> sc = SampleClass(3)
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|     >>> for i in range(10):
 | |
|     ...     sc = sc.double()
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|     ...     print(' ', sc.get(), sep='', end='')
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|      6 12 24 48 96 192 384 768 1536 3072
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def __init__(self, val):
 | |
|         """
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|         >>> print(SampleClass(12).get())
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|         12
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|         """
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|         self.val = val
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| 
 | |
|     def double(self):
 | |
|         """
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|         >>> print(SampleClass(12).double().get())
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|         24
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|         """
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|         return SampleClass(self.val + self.val)
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| 
 | |
|     def get(self):
 | |
|         """
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|         >>> print(SampleClass(-5).get())
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|         -5
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|         """
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|         return self.val
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| 
 | |
|     def a_staticmethod(v):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         >>> print(SampleClass.a_staticmethod(10))
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|         11
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|         """
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|         return v+1
 | |
|     a_staticmethod = staticmethod(a_staticmethod)
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| 
 | |
|     def a_classmethod(cls, v):
 | |
|         """
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|         >>> print(SampleClass.a_classmethod(10))
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|         12
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|         >>> print(SampleClass(0).a_classmethod(10))
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|         12
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|         """
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|         return v+2
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|     a_classmethod = classmethod(a_classmethod)
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| 
 | |
|     a_property = property(get, doc="""
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|         >>> print(SampleClass(22).a_property)
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|         22
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|         """)
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| 
 | |
|     class NestedClass:
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         >>> x = SampleClass.NestedClass(5)
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|         >>> y = x.square()
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|         >>> print(y.get())
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|         25
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|         """
 | |
|         def __init__(self, val=0):
 | |
|             """
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|             >>> print(SampleClass.NestedClass().get())
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|             0
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|             """
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|             self.val = val
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|         def square(self):
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|             return SampleClass.NestedClass(self.val*self.val)
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|         def get(self):
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|             return self.val
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| 
 | |
| class SampleNewStyleClass(object):
 | |
|     r"""
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|     >>> print('1\n2\n3')
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|     1
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|     2
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|     3
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|     """
 | |
|     def __init__(self, val):
 | |
|         """
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|         >>> print(SampleNewStyleClass(12).get())
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|         12
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|         """
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|         self.val = val
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| 
 | |
|     def double(self):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         >>> print(SampleNewStyleClass(12).double().get())
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|         24
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         return SampleNewStyleClass(self.val + self.val)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def get(self):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         >>> print(SampleNewStyleClass(-5).get())
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|         -5
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|         """
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|         return self.val
 | |
| 
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| ## Fake stdin (for testing interactive debugging)
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| 
 | |
| class _FakeInput:
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     A fake input stream for pdb's interactive debugger.  Whenever a
 | |
|     line is read, print it (to simulate the user typing it), and then
 | |
|     return it.  The set of lines to return is specified in the
 | |
|     constructor; they should not have trailing newlines.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def __init__(self, lines):
 | |
|         self.lines = lines
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def readline(self):
 | |
|         line = self.lines.pop(0)
 | |
|         print(line)
 | |
|         return line+'\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| ## Test Cases
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_Example(): r"""
 | |
| Unit tests for the `Example` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example is a simple container class that holds:
 | |
|   - `source`: A source string.
 | |
|   - `want`: An expected output string.
 | |
|   - `exc_msg`: An expected exception message string (or None if no
 | |
|     exception is expected).
 | |
|   - `lineno`: A line number (within the docstring).
 | |
|   - `indent`: The example's indentation in the input string.
 | |
|   - `options`: An option dictionary, mapping option flags to True or
 | |
|     False.
 | |
| 
 | |
| These attributes are set by the constructor.  `source` and `want` are
 | |
| required; the other attributes all have default values:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> example = doctest.Example('print(1)', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> (example.source, example.want, example.exc_msg,
 | |
|     ...  example.lineno, example.indent, example.options)
 | |
|     ('print(1)\n', '1\n', None, 0, 0, {})
 | |
| 
 | |
| The first three attributes (`source`, `want`, and `exc_msg`) may be
 | |
| specified positionally; the remaining arguments should be specified as
 | |
| keyword arguments:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list'
 | |
|     >>> example = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg,
 | |
|     ...                           lineno=5, indent=4,
 | |
|     ...                           options={doctest.ELLIPSIS: True})
 | |
|     >>> (example.source, example.want, example.exc_msg,
 | |
|     ...  example.lineno, example.indent, example.options)
 | |
|     ('[].pop()\n', '', 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n', 5, 4, {8: True})
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| 
 | |
| The constructor normalizes the `source` string to end in a newline:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Source spans a single line: no terminating newline.
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1)', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> e.source, e.want
 | |
|     ('print(1)\n', '1\n')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1)\n', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> e.source, e.want
 | |
|     ('print(1)\n', '1\n')
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| 
 | |
|     Source spans multiple lines: require terminating newline.
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|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1);\nprint(2)\n', '1\n2\n')
 | |
|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('print(1);\nprint(2)\n', '1\n2\n')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1);\nprint(2)', '1\n2\n')
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|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('print(1);\nprint(2)\n', '1\n2\n')
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| 
 | |
|     Empty source string (which should never appear in real examples)
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|     >>> e = doctest.Example('', '')
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|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('\n', '')
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| 
 | |
| The constructor normalizes the `want` string to end in a newline,
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| unless it's the empty string:
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| 
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1)', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('print(1)\n', '1\n')
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| 
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print(1)', '1')
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|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('print(1)\n', '1\n')
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| 
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('print', '')
 | |
|     >>> e.source, e.want
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|     ('print\n', '')
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| 
 | |
| The constructor normalizes the `exc_msg` string to end in a newline,
 | |
| unless it's `None`:
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| 
 | |
|     Message spans one line
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|     >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list'
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg)
 | |
|     >>> e.exc_msg
 | |
|     'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg)
 | |
|     >>> e.exc_msg
 | |
|     'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Message spans multiple lines
 | |
|     >>> exc_msg = 'ValueError: 1\n  2'
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('raise ValueError("1\n  2")', '', exc_msg)
 | |
|     >>> e.exc_msg
 | |
|     'ValueError: 1\n  2\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> exc_msg = 'ValueError: 1\n  2\n'
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('raise ValueError("1\n  2")', '', exc_msg)
 | |
|     >>> e.exc_msg
 | |
|     'ValueError: 1\n  2\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Empty (but non-None) exception message (which should never appear
 | |
|     in real examples)
 | |
|     >>> exc_msg = ''
 | |
|     >>> e = doctest.Example('raise X()', '', exc_msg)
 | |
|     >>> e.exc_msg
 | |
|     '\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compare `Example`:
 | |
|     >>> example = doctest.Example('print 1', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> same_example = doctest.Example('print 1', '1\n')
 | |
|     >>> other_example = doctest.Example('print 42', '42\n')
 | |
|     >>> example == same_example
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> example != same_example
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> hash(example) == hash(same_example)
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> example == other_example
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> example != other_example
 | |
|     True
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_DocTest(): r"""
 | |
| Unit tests for the `DocTest` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| DocTest is a collection of examples, extracted from a docstring, along
 | |
| with information about where the docstring comes from (a name,
 | |
| filename, and line number).  The docstring is parsed by the `DocTest`
 | |
| constructor:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(12)
 | |
|     ...     12
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ... Non-example text.
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> print('another\\example')
 | |
|     ...     another
 | |
|     ...     example
 | |
|     ... '''
 | |
|     >>> globs = {} # globals to run the test in.
 | |
|     >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
 | |
|     >>> test = parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test',
 | |
|     ...                           'some_file', 20)
 | |
|     >>> print(test)
 | |
|     <DocTest some_test from some_file:20 (2 examples)>
 | |
|     >>> len(test.examples)
 | |
|     2
 | |
|     >>> e1, e2 = test.examples
 | |
|     >>> (e1.source, e1.want, e1.lineno)
 | |
|     ('print(12)\n', '12\n', 1)
 | |
|     >>> (e2.source, e2.want, e2.lineno)
 | |
|     ("print('another\\example')\n", 'another\nexample\n', 6)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Source information (name, filename, and line number) is available as
 | |
| attributes on the doctest object:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> (test.name, test.filename, test.lineno)
 | |
|     ('some_test', 'some_file', 20)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The line number of an example within its containing file is found by
 | |
| adding the line number of the example and the line number of its
 | |
| containing test:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> test.lineno + e1.lineno
 | |
|     21
 | |
|     >>> test.lineno + e2.lineno
 | |
|     26
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the docstring contains inconsistent leading whitespace in the
 | |
| expected output of an example, then `DocTest` will raise a ValueError:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = r'''
 | |
|     ...       >>> print('bad\nindentation')
 | |
|     ...       bad
 | |
|     ...     indentation
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 4 of the docstring for some_test has inconsistent leading whitespace: 'indentation'
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the docstring contains inconsistent leading whitespace on
 | |
| continuation lines, then `DocTest` will raise a ValueError:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = r'''
 | |
|     ...       >>> print(('bad indentation',
 | |
|     ...     ...          2))
 | |
|     ...       ('bad', 'indentation')
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 2 of the docstring for some_test has inconsistent leading whitespace: '...          2))'
 | |
| 
 | |
| If there's no blank space after a PS1 prompt ('>>>'), then `DocTest`
 | |
| will raise a ValueError:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = '>>>print(1)\n1'
 | |
|     >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 1 of the docstring for some_test lacks blank after >>>: '>>>print(1)'
 | |
| 
 | |
| If there's no blank space after a PS2 prompt ('...'), then `DocTest`
 | |
| will raise a ValueError:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = '>>> if 1:\n...print(1)\n1'
 | |
|     >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 2 of the docstring for some_test lacks blank after ...: '...print(1)'
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compare `DocTest`:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> docstring = '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print 12
 | |
|     ...     12
 | |
|     ... '''
 | |
|     >>> test = parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test',
 | |
|     ...                           'some_test', 20)
 | |
|     >>> same_test = parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test',
 | |
|     ...                                'some_test', 20)
 | |
|     >>> test == same_test
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> test != same_test
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> hash(test) == hash(same_test)
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> docstring = '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print 42
 | |
|     ...     42
 | |
|     ... '''
 | |
|     >>> other_test = parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'other_test',
 | |
|     ...                                 'other_file', 10)
 | |
|     >>> test == other_test
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> test != other_test
 | |
|     True
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compare `DocTestCase`:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> DocTestCase = doctest.DocTestCase
 | |
|     >>> test_case = DocTestCase(test)
 | |
|     >>> same_test_case = DocTestCase(same_test)
 | |
|     >>> other_test_case = DocTestCase(other_test)
 | |
|     >>> test_case == same_test_case
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> test_case != same_test_case
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> hash(test_case) == hash(same_test_case)
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> test == other_test_case
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> test != other_test_case
 | |
|     True
 | |
| 
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| class test_DocTestFinder:
 | |
|     def basics(): r"""
 | |
| Unit tests for the `DocTestFinder` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| DocTestFinder is used to extract DocTests from an object's docstring
 | |
| and the docstrings of its contained objects.  It can be used with
 | |
| modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods, classmethods, and
 | |
| properties.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Finding Tests in Functions
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| For a function whose docstring contains examples, DocTestFinder.find()
 | |
| will return a single test (for that function's docstring):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
 | |
| 
 | |
| We'll simulate a __file__ attr that ends in pyc:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import test.test_doctest
 | |
|     >>> old = test.test_doctest.__file__
 | |
|     >>> test.test_doctest.__file__ = 'test_doctest.pyc'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests = finder.find(sample_func)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> print(tests)  # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     [<DocTest sample_func from ...:21 (1 example)>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| The exact name depends on how test_doctest was invoked, so allow for
 | |
| leading path components.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests[0].filename # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     '...test_doctest.py'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> test.test_doctest.__file__ = old
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> e = tests[0].examples[0]
 | |
|     >>> (e.source, e.want, e.lineno)
 | |
|     ('print(sample_func(22))\n', '44\n', 3)
 | |
| 
 | |
| By default, tests are created for objects with no docstring:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def no_docstring(v):
 | |
|     ...     pass
 | |
|     >>> finder.find(no_docstring)
 | |
|     []
 | |
| 
 | |
| However, the optional argument `exclude_empty` to the DocTestFinder
 | |
| constructor can be used to exclude tests for objects with empty
 | |
| docstrings:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def no_docstring(v):
 | |
|     ...     pass
 | |
|     >>> excl_empty_finder = doctest.DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=True)
 | |
|     >>> excl_empty_finder.find(no_docstring)
 | |
|     []
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the function has a docstring with no examples, then a test with no
 | |
| examples is returned.  (This lets `DocTestRunner` collect statistics
 | |
| about which functions have no tests -- but is that useful?  And should
 | |
| an empty test also be created when there's no docstring?)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def no_examples(v):
 | |
|     ...     ''' no doctest examples '''
 | |
|     >>> finder.find(no_examples) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     [<DocTest no_examples from ...:1 (no examples)>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Finding Tests in Classes
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| For a class, DocTestFinder will create a test for the class's
 | |
| docstring, and will recursively explore its contents, including
 | |
| methods, classmethods, staticmethods, properties, and nested classes.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
 | |
|     >>> tests = finder.find(SampleClass)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      3  SampleClass
 | |
|      3  SampleClass.NestedClass
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.__init__
 | |
|      2  SampleClass.a_classmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_property
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_staticmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.double
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.get
 | |
| 
 | |
| New-style classes are also supported:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests = finder.find(SampleNewStyleClass)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      1  SampleNewStyleClass
 | |
|      1  SampleNewStyleClass.__init__
 | |
|      1  SampleNewStyleClass.double
 | |
|      1  SampleNewStyleClass.get
 | |
| 
 | |
| Finding Tests in Modules
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| For a module, DocTestFinder will create a test for the class's
 | |
| docstring, and will recursively explore its contents, including
 | |
| functions, classes, and the `__test__` dictionary, if it exists:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # A module
 | |
|     >>> import types
 | |
|     >>> m = types.ModuleType('some_module')
 | |
|     >>> def triple(val):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(triple(11))
 | |
|     ...     33
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     return val*3
 | |
|     >>> m.__dict__.update({
 | |
|     ...     'sample_func': sample_func,
 | |
|     ...     'SampleClass': SampleClass,
 | |
|     ...     '__doc__': '''
 | |
|     ...         Module docstring.
 | |
|     ...             >>> print('module')
 | |
|     ...             module
 | |
|     ...         ''',
 | |
|     ...     '__test__': {
 | |
|     ...         'd': '>>> print(6)\n6\n>>> print(7)\n7\n',
 | |
|     ...         'c': triple}})
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
 | |
|     >>> # Use module=test.test_doctest, to prevent doctest from
 | |
|     >>> # ignoring the objects since they weren't defined in m.
 | |
|     >>> import test.test_doctest
 | |
|     >>> tests = finder.find(m, module=test.test_doctest)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      1  some_module
 | |
|      3  some_module.SampleClass
 | |
|      3  some_module.SampleClass.NestedClass
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.__init__
 | |
|      2  some_module.SampleClass.a_classmethod
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.a_property
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.a_staticmethod
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.double
 | |
|      1  some_module.SampleClass.get
 | |
|      1  some_module.__test__.c
 | |
|      2  some_module.__test__.d
 | |
|      1  some_module.sample_func
 | |
| 
 | |
| Duplicate Removal
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| If a single object is listed twice (under different names), then tests
 | |
| will only be generated for it once:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> from test import doctest_aliases
 | |
|     >>> assert doctest_aliases.TwoNames.f
 | |
|     >>> assert doctest_aliases.TwoNames.g
 | |
|     >>> tests = excl_empty_finder.find(doctest_aliases)
 | |
|     >>> print(len(tests))
 | |
|     2
 | |
|     >>> print(tests[0].name)
 | |
|     test.doctest_aliases.TwoNames
 | |
| 
 | |
|     TwoNames.f and TwoNames.g are bound to the same object.
 | |
|     We can't guess which will be found in doctest's traversal of
 | |
|     TwoNames.__dict__ first, so we have to allow for either.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests[1].name.split('.')[-1] in ['f', 'g']
 | |
|     True
 | |
| 
 | |
| Empty Tests
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| By default, an object with no doctests doesn't create any tests:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(SampleClass)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      3  SampleClass
 | |
|      3  SampleClass.NestedClass
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.__init__
 | |
|      2  SampleClass.a_classmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_property
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_staticmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.double
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.get
 | |
| 
 | |
| By default, that excluded objects with no doctests.  exclude_empty=False
 | |
| tells it to include (empty) tests for objects with no doctests.  This feature
 | |
| is really to support backward compatibility in what doctest.master.summarize()
 | |
| displays.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=False).find(SampleClass)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      3  SampleClass
 | |
|      3  SampleClass.NestedClass
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
 | |
|      0  SampleClass.NestedClass.get
 | |
|      0  SampleClass.NestedClass.square
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.__init__
 | |
|      2  SampleClass.a_classmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_property
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.a_staticmethod
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.double
 | |
|      1  SampleClass.get
 | |
| 
 | |
| Turning off Recursion
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| DocTestFinder can be told not to look for tests in contained objects
 | |
| using the `recurse` flag:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder(recurse=False).find(SampleClass)
 | |
|     >>> for t in tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('%2s  %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|      3  SampleClass
 | |
| 
 | |
| Line numbers
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| DocTestFinder finds the line number of each example:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     some text
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> # examples are not created for comments & bare prompts.
 | |
|     ...     >>>
 | |
|     ...     ...
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> for x in range(10):
 | |
|     ...     ...     print(x, end=' ')
 | |
|     ...     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
 | |
|     ...     >>> x//2
 | |
|     ...     6
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> [e.lineno for e in test.examples]
 | |
|     [1, 9, 12]
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if int.__doc__: # simple check for --without-doc-strings, skip if lacking
 | |
|         def non_Python_modules(): r"""
 | |
| 
 | |
| Finding Doctests in Modules Not Written in Python
 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | |
| DocTestFinder can also find doctests in most modules not written in Python.
 | |
| We'll use builtins as an example, since it almost certainly isn't written in
 | |
| plain ol' Python and is guaranteed to be available.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import builtins
 | |
|     >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(builtins)
 | |
|     >>> 800 < len(tests) < 820 # approximate number of objects with docstrings
 | |
|     True
 | |
|     >>> real_tests = [t for t in tests if len(t.examples) > 0]
 | |
|     >>> len(real_tests) # objects that actually have doctests
 | |
|     12
 | |
|     >>> for t in real_tests:
 | |
|     ...     print('{}  {}'.format(len(t.examples), t.name))
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     1  builtins.bin
 | |
|     5  builtins.bytearray.hex
 | |
|     5  builtins.bytes.hex
 | |
|     3  builtins.float.as_integer_ratio
 | |
|     2  builtins.float.fromhex
 | |
|     2  builtins.float.hex
 | |
|     1  builtins.hex
 | |
|     1  builtins.int
 | |
|     3  builtins.int.as_integer_ratio
 | |
|     2  builtins.int.bit_length
 | |
|     5  builtins.memoryview.hex
 | |
|     1  builtins.oct
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note here that 'bin', 'oct', and 'hex' are functions; 'float.as_integer_ratio',
 | |
| 'float.hex', and 'int.bit_length' are methods; 'float.fromhex' is a classmethod,
 | |
| and 'int' is a type.
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class TestDocTestFinder(unittest.TestCase):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def test_empty_namespace_package(self):
 | |
|         pkg_name = 'doctest_empty_pkg'
 | |
|         with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as parent_dir:
 | |
|             pkg_dir = os.path.join(parent_dir, pkg_name)
 | |
|             os.mkdir(pkg_dir)
 | |
|             sys.path.append(parent_dir)
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 mod = importlib.import_module(pkg_name)
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 support.forget(pkg_name)
 | |
|                 sys.path.pop()
 | |
|             assert doctest.DocTestFinder().find(mod) == []
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_DocTestParser(): r"""
 | |
| Unit tests for the `DocTestParser` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| DocTestParser is used to parse docstrings containing doctest examples.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The `parse` method divides a docstring into examples and intervening
 | |
| text:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> s = '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x, y = 2, 3  # no output expected
 | |
|     ...     >>> if 1:
 | |
|     ...     ...     print(x)
 | |
|     ...     ...     print(y)
 | |
|     ...     2
 | |
|     ...     3
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     Some text.
 | |
|     ...     >>> x+y
 | |
|     ...     5
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
 | |
|     >>> for piece in parser.parse(s):
 | |
|     ...     if isinstance(piece, doctest.Example):
 | |
|     ...         print('Example:', (piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno))
 | |
|     ...     else:
 | |
|     ...         print('   Text:', repr(piece))
 | |
|        Text: '\n'
 | |
|     Example: ('x, y = 2, 3  # no output expected\n', '', 1)
 | |
|        Text: ''
 | |
|     Example: ('if 1:\n    print(x)\n    print(y)\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
 | |
|        Text: '\nSome text.\n'
 | |
|     Example: ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
 | |
|        Text: ''
 | |
| 
 | |
| The `get_examples` method returns just the examples:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> for piece in parser.get_examples(s):
 | |
|     ...     print((piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno))
 | |
|     ('x, y = 2, 3  # no output expected\n', '', 1)
 | |
|     ('if 1:\n    print(x)\n    print(y)\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
 | |
|     ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The `get_doctest` method creates a Test from the examples, along with the
 | |
| given arguments:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> test = parser.get_doctest(s, {}, 'name', 'filename', lineno=5)
 | |
|     >>> (test.name, test.filename, test.lineno)
 | |
|     ('name', 'filename', 5)
 | |
|     >>> for piece in test.examples:
 | |
|     ...     print((piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno))
 | |
|     ('x, y = 2, 3  # no output expected\n', '', 1)
 | |
|     ('if 1:\n    print(x)\n    print(y)\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
 | |
|     ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| class test_DocTestRunner:
 | |
|     def basics(): r"""
 | |
| Unit tests for the `DocTestRunner` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| DocTestRunner is used to run DocTest test cases, and to accumulate
 | |
| statistics.  Here's a simple DocTest case we can use:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(x)
 | |
|     ...     12
 | |
|     ...     >>> x//2
 | |
|     ...     6
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
| 
 | |
| The main DocTestRunner interface is the `run` method, which runs a
 | |
| given DocTest case in a given namespace (globs).  It returns a tuple
 | |
| `(f,t)`, where `f` is the number of failed tests and `t` is the number
 | |
| of tried tests.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If any example produces incorrect output, then the test runner reports
 | |
| the failure and proceeds to the next example:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(x)
 | |
|     ...     14
 | |
|     ...     >>> x//2
 | |
|     ...     6
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x = 12
 | |
|     Expecting nothing
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         print(x)
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         14
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 4, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(x)
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         14
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         12
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x//2
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         6
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=3)
 | |
| """
 | |
|     def verbose_flag(): r"""
 | |
| The `verbose` flag makes the test runner generate more detailed
 | |
| output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(x)
 | |
|     ...     12
 | |
|     ...     >>> x//2
 | |
|     ...     6
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True).run(test)
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x = 12
 | |
|     Expecting nothing
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         print(x)
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         12
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x//2
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         6
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the `verbose` flag is unspecified, then the output will be verbose
 | |
| iff `-v` appears in sys.argv:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Save the real sys.argv list.
 | |
|     >>> old_argv = sys.argv
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # If -v does not appear in sys.argv, then output isn't verbose.
 | |
|     >>> sys.argv = ['test']
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner().run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # If -v does appear in sys.argv, then output is verbose.
 | |
|     >>> sys.argv = ['test', '-v']
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner().run(test)
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x = 12
 | |
|     Expecting nothing
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         print(x)
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         12
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         x//2
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         6
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Restore sys.argv
 | |
|     >>> sys.argv = old_argv
 | |
| 
 | |
| In the remaining examples, the test runner's verbosity will be
 | |
| explicitly set, to ensure that the test behavior is consistent.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def exceptions(): r"""
 | |
| Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s exception handling.
 | |
| 
 | |
| An expected exception is specified with a traceback message.  The
 | |
| lines between the first line and the type/value may be omitted or
 | |
| replaced with any other string:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(x//0)
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| An example may not generate output before it raises an exception; if
 | |
| it does, then the traceback message will not be recognized as
 | |
| signaling an expected exception, so the example will be reported as an
 | |
| unexpected exception:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print('pre-exception output', x//0)
 | |
|     ...     pre-exception output
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 4, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print('pre-exception output', x//0)
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Exception messages may contain newlines:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise ValueError('multi\nline\nmessage')
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     ValueError: multi
 | |
|     ...     line
 | |
|     ...     message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If an exception is expected, but an exception with the wrong type or
 | |
| message is raised, then it is reported as a failure:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise ValueError('message')
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     ValueError: wrong message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('message')
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ValueError: wrong message
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ValueError: message
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| However, IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL can be used to allow a mismatch in the
 | |
| detail:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise ValueError('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     ValueError: wrong message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL also ignores difference in exception formatting
 | |
| between Python versions. For example, in Python 2.x, the module path of
 | |
| the exception is not in the output, but this will fail under Python 3:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException('message')
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     HTTPException: message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 4, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise HTTPException('message')
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         HTTPException: message
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         http.client.HTTPException: message
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| But in Python 3 the module path is included, and therefore a test must look
 | |
| like the following test to succeed in Python 3. But that test will fail under
 | |
| Python 2.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException('message')
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     http.client.HTTPException: message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| However, with IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL, the module name of the exception
 | |
| (or its unexpected absence) will be ignored:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     HTTPException: message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The module path will be completely ignored, so two different module paths will
 | |
| still pass if IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL is given. This is intentional, so it can
 | |
| be used when exceptions have changed module.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     foo.bar.HTTPException: message
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| But IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL does not allow a mismatch in the exception type:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise ValueError('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     TypeError: wrong type
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         TypeError: wrong type
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ValueError: message
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the exception does not have a message, you can still use
 | |
| IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL to normalize the modules between Python 2 and 3:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException() #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     foo.bar.HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that a trailing colon doesn't matter either:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> from http.client import HTTPException
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise HTTPException() #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
 | |
|     ...     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ...     foo.bar.HTTPException:
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If an exception is raised but not expected, then it is reported as an
 | |
| unexpected exception:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> 1//0
 | |
|     ...     0
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         1//0
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| """
 | |
|     def displayhook(): r"""
 | |
| Test that changing sys.displayhook doesn't matter for doctest.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import sys
 | |
|     >>> orig_displayhook = sys.displayhook
 | |
|     >>> def my_displayhook(x):
 | |
|     ...     print('hi!')
 | |
|     >>> sys.displayhook = my_displayhook
 | |
|     >>> def f():
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> 3
 | |
|     ...     3
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> r = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     >>> post_displayhook = sys.displayhook
 | |
| 
 | |
|     We need to restore sys.displayhook now, so that we'll be able to test
 | |
|     results.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> sys.displayhook = orig_displayhook
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Ok, now we can check that everything is ok.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> r
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
|     >>> post_displayhook is my_displayhook
 | |
|     True
 | |
| """
 | |
|     def optionflags(): r"""
 | |
| Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s option flag handling.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Several option flags can be used to customize the behavior of the test
 | |
| runner.  These are defined as module constants in doctest, and passed
 | |
| to the DocTestRunner constructor (multiple constants should be ORed
 | |
| together).
 | |
| 
 | |
| The DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 flag disables matches between True/False
 | |
| and 1/0:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '>>> True\n1\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Without the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # With the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         True
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         1
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         True
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag disables the match between blank lines
 | |
| and the '<BLANKLINE>' marker:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '>>> print("a\\n\\nb")\na\n<BLANKLINE>\nb\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Without the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # With the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print("a\n\nb")
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         a
 | |
|         <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|         b
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         a
 | |
|     <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|         b
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE flag causes all sequences of whitespace to be
 | |
| treated as equal:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '>>> print(1, 2, 3)\n  1   2\n 3'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Without the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(1, 2, 3)
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|           1   2
 | |
|          3
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         1 2 3
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # With the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     An example from the docs:
 | |
|     >>> print(list(range(20))) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     [0,   1,  2,  3,  4,  5,  6,  7,  8,  9,
 | |
|     10,  11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]
 | |
| 
 | |
| The ELLIPSIS flag causes ellipsis marker ("...") in the expected
 | |
| output to match any substring in the actual output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     '>>> print(list(range(15)))\n[0, 1, 2, ..., 14]\n'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Without the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(15)))
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, ..., 14]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # With the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     ... also matches nothing:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> if 1:
 | |
|     ...     for i in range(100):
 | |
|     ...         print(i**2, end=' ') #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     print('!')
 | |
|     0 1...4...9 16 ... 36 49 64 ... 9801 !
 | |
| 
 | |
|     ... can be surprising; e.g., this test passes:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> if 1:  #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     for i in range(20):
 | |
|     ...         print(i, end=' ')
 | |
|     ...     print(20)
 | |
|     0 1 2 ...1...2...0
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Examples from the docs:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> print(list(range(20))) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     [0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> print(list(range(20))) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...                 # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     [0,    1, ...,   18,    19]
 | |
| 
 | |
| The SKIP flag causes an example to be skipped entirely.  I.e., the
 | |
| example is not run.  It can be useful in contexts where doctest
 | |
| examples serve as both documentation and test cases, and an example
 | |
| should be included for documentation purposes, but should not be
 | |
| checked (e.g., because its output is random, or depends on resources
 | |
| which would be unavailable.)  The SKIP flag can also be used for
 | |
| 'commenting out' broken examples.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import unavailable_resource           # doctest: +SKIP
 | |
|     >>> unavailable_resource.do_something()   # doctest: +SKIP
 | |
|     >>> unavailable_resource.blow_up()        # doctest: +SKIP
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|     UncheckedBlowUpError:  Nobody checks me.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import random
 | |
|     >>> print(random.random()) # doctest: +SKIP
 | |
|     0.721216923889
 | |
| 
 | |
| The REPORT_UDIFF flag causes failures that involve multi-line expected
 | |
| and actual outputs to be displayed using a unified diff:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print('\n'.join('abcdefg'))
 | |
|     ...     a
 | |
|     ...     B
 | |
|     ...     c
 | |
|     ...     d
 | |
|     ...     f
 | |
|     ...     g
 | |
|     ...     h
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Without the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print('\n'.join('abcdefg'))
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         a
 | |
|         B
 | |
|         c
 | |
|         d
 | |
|         f
 | |
|         g
 | |
|         h
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         a
 | |
|         b
 | |
|         c
 | |
|         d
 | |
|         e
 | |
|         f
 | |
|         g
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # With the flag:
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_UDIFF
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print('\n'.join('abcdefg'))
 | |
|     Differences (unified diff with -expected +actual):
 | |
|         @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 | |
|          a
 | |
|         -B
 | |
|         +b
 | |
|          c
 | |
|          d
 | |
|         +e
 | |
|          f
 | |
|          g
 | |
|         -h
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The REPORT_CDIFF flag causes failures that involve multi-line expected
 | |
| and actual outputs to be displayed using a context diff:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Reuse f() from the REPORT_UDIFF example, above.
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_CDIFF
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print('\n'.join('abcdefg'))
 | |
|     Differences (context diff with expected followed by actual):
 | |
|         ***************
 | |
|         *** 1,7 ****
 | |
|           a
 | |
|         ! B
 | |
|           c
 | |
|           d
 | |
|           f
 | |
|           g
 | |
|         - h
 | |
|         --- 1,7 ----
 | |
|           a
 | |
|         ! b
 | |
|           c
 | |
|           d
 | |
|         + e
 | |
|           f
 | |
|           g
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The REPORT_NDIFF flag causes failures to use the difflib.Differ algorithm
 | |
| used by the popular ndiff.py utility.  This does intraline difference
 | |
| marking, as well as interline differences.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print("a b  c d e f g h i   j k l m")
 | |
|     ...     a b c d e f g h i j k 1 m
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_NDIFF
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print("a b  c d e f g h i   j k l m")
 | |
|     Differences (ndiff with -expected +actual):
 | |
|         - a b c d e f g h i j k 1 m
 | |
|         ?                       ^
 | |
|         + a b  c d e f g h i   j k l m
 | |
|         ?     +              ++    ^
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE suppresses result output after the first
 | |
| failing example:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(1) # first success
 | |
|     ...     1
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     ...     200
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(3) # second failure
 | |
|     ...     300
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(4) # second success
 | |
|     ...     4
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(5) # third failure
 | |
|     ...     500
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         200
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
 | |
| 
 | |
| However, output from `report_start` is not suppressed:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         print(1) # first success
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         1
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         200
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         200
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The FAIL_FAST flag causes the runner to exit after the first failing example,
 | |
| so subsequent examples are not even attempted:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.FAIL_FAST
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         200
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Specifying both FAIL_FAST and REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE is equivalent to
 | |
| FAIL_FAST only:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.FAIL_FAST | doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         200
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| For the purposes of both REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE and FAIL_FAST, unexpected
 | |
| exceptions count as failures:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(1) # first success
 | |
|     ...     1
 | |
|     ...     >>> raise ValueError(2) # first failure
 | |
|     ...     200
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(3) # second failure
 | |
|     ...     300
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(4) # second success
 | |
|     ...     4
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(5) # third failure
 | |
|     ...     500
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise ValueError(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ValueError: 2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.FAIL_FAST
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 5, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise ValueError(2) # first failure
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         ValueError: 2
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| New option flags can also be registered, via register_optionflag().  Here
 | |
| we reach into doctest's internals a bit.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> unlikely = "UNLIKELY_OPTION_NAME"
 | |
|     >>> unlikely in doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME
 | |
|     False
 | |
|     >>> new_flag_value = doctest.register_optionflag(unlikely)
 | |
|     >>> unlikely in doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME
 | |
|     True
 | |
| 
 | |
| Before 2.4.4/2.5, registering a name more than once erroneously created
 | |
| more than one flag value.  Here we verify that's fixed:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> redundant_flag_value = doctest.register_optionflag(unlikely)
 | |
|     >>> redundant_flag_value == new_flag_value
 | |
|     True
 | |
| 
 | |
| Clean up.
 | |
|     >>> del doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[unlikely]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def option_directives(): r"""
 | |
| Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s option directive mechanism.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Option directives can be used to turn option flags on or off for a
 | |
| single example.  To turn an option on for an example, follow that
 | |
| example with a comment of the form ``# doctest: +OPTION``:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| To turn an option off for an example, follow that example with a
 | |
| comment of the form ``# doctest: -OPTION``:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> # should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # doctest: -ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False,
 | |
|     ...                       optionflags=doctest.ELLIPSIS).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 6, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # doctest: -ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Option directives affect only the example that they appear with; they
 | |
| do not change the options for surrounding examples:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 8, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail: no ellipsis
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=2, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Multiple options may be modified by a single option directive.  They
 | |
| may be separated by whitespace, commas, or both:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should succeed
 | |
|     ...     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should succeed
 | |
|     ...     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS,+NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))      # Should succeed
 | |
|     ...     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS, +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 2, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print(list(range(10)))      # Should fail
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         [0, 1,  ...,   9]
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The option directive may be put on the line following the source, as
 | |
| long as a continuation prompt is used:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(list(range(10)))
 | |
|     ...     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     [0, 1, ..., 9]
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| For examples with multi-line source, the option directive may appear
 | |
| at the end of any line:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> for x in range(10): # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...     ...     print(' ', x, end='', sep='')
 | |
|     ...      0 1 2 ... 9
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     ...     >>> for x in range(10):
 | |
|     ...     ...     print(' ', x, end='', sep='') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...      0 1 2 ... 9
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If more than one line of an example with multi-line source has an
 | |
| option directive, then they are combined:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x): r'''
 | |
|     ...     Should fail (option directive not on the last line):
 | |
|     ...         >>> for x in range(10): # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     ...         ...     print(x, end=' ') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|     ...         0  1    2...9
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is an error to have a comment of the form ``# doctest:`` that is
 | |
| *not* followed by words of the form ``+OPTION`` or ``-OPTION``, where
 | |
| ``OPTION`` is an option that has been registered with
 | |
| `register_option`:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Error: Option not registered
 | |
|     >>> s = '>>> print(12)  #doctest: +BADOPTION'
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 1 of the doctest for s has an invalid option: '+BADOPTION'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> # Error: No + or - prefix
 | |
|     >>> s = '>>> print(12)  #doctest: ELLIPSIS'
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 1 of the doctest for s has an invalid option: 'ELLIPSIS'
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is an error to use an option directive on a line that contains no
 | |
| source:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> s = '>>> # doctest: +ELLIPSIS'
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     ValueError: line 0 of the doctest for s has an option directive on a line with no example: '# doctest: +ELLIPSIS'
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| 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 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!
 | |
|     <BLANKLINE>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.SampleNewStyleClass'
 | |
|     >>> print(doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name))
 | |
|     print('1\n2\n3')
 | |
|     # Expected:
 | |
|     ## 1
 | |
|     ## 2
 | |
|     ## 3
 | |
|     <BLANKLINE>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.SampleClass.a_classmethod'
 | |
|     >>> print(doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name))
 | |
|     print(SampleClass.a_classmethod(10))
 | |
|     # Expected:
 | |
|     ## 12
 | |
|     print(SampleClass(0).a_classmethod(10))
 | |
|     # Expected:
 | |
|     ## 12
 | |
|     <BLANKLINE>
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_debug(): r"""
 | |
| 
 | |
| Create a docstring that we want to debug:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> s = '''
 | |
|     ...     >>> x = 12
 | |
|     ...     >>> print(x)
 | |
|     ...     12
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
| 
 | |
| Create some fake stdin input, to feed to the debugger:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
 | |
|     >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput(['next', 'print(x)', 'continue'])
 | |
| 
 | |
| Run the debugger on the docstring, and then restore sys.stdin.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> try: doctest.debug_src(s)
 | |
|     ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
 | |
|     > <string>(1)<module>()
 | |
|     (Pdb) next
 | |
|     12
 | |
|     --Return--
 | |
|     > <string>(1)<module>()->None
 | |
|     (Pdb) print(x)
 | |
|     12
 | |
|     (Pdb) continue
 | |
| 
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| if not hasattr(sys, 'gettrace') or not sys.gettrace():
 | |
|     def test_pdb_set_trace():
 | |
|         """Using pdb.set_trace from a doctest.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         You can use pdb.set_trace from a doctest.  To do so, you must
 | |
|         retrieve the set_trace function from the pdb module at the time
 | |
|         you use it.  The doctest module changes sys.stdout so that it can
 | |
|         capture program output.  It also temporarily replaces pdb.set_trace
 | |
|         with a version that restores stdout.  This is necessary for you to
 | |
|         see debugger output.
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> doc = '''
 | |
|           ... >>> x = 42
 | |
|           ... >>> raise Exception('clé')
 | |
|           ... Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|           ... Exception: clé
 | |
|           ... >>> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           ... '''
 | |
|           >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
 | |
|           >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, {}, "foo-bar@baz", "foo-bar@baz.py", 0)
 | |
|           >>> runner = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
 | |
| 
 | |
|         To demonstrate this, we'll create a fake standard input that
 | |
|         captures our debugger input:
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
 | |
|           >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
 | |
|           ...    'print(x)',  # print data defined by the example
 | |
|           ...    'continue', # stop debugging
 | |
|           ...    ''])
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> try: runner.run(test)
 | |
|           ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
 | |
|           --Return--
 | |
|           > <doctest foo-bar@baz[2]>(1)<module>()->None
 | |
|           -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           (Pdb) print(x)
 | |
|           42
 | |
|           (Pdb) continue
 | |
|           TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
 | |
| 
 | |
|           You can also put pdb.set_trace in a function called from a test:
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> def calls_set_trace():
 | |
|           ...    y=2
 | |
|           ...    import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> doc = '''
 | |
|           ... >>> x=1
 | |
|           ... >>> calls_set_trace()
 | |
|           ... '''
 | |
|           >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo-bar@baz", "foo-bar@baz.py", 0)
 | |
|           >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
 | |
|           >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
 | |
|           ...    'print(y)',  # print data defined in the function
 | |
|           ...    'up',       # out of function
 | |
|           ...    'print(x)',  # print data defined by the example
 | |
|           ...    'continue', # stop debugging
 | |
|           ...    ''])
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> try:
 | |
|           ...     runner.run(test)
 | |
|           ... finally:
 | |
|           ...     sys.stdin = real_stdin
 | |
|           --Return--
 | |
|           > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace[7]>(3)calls_set_trace()->None
 | |
|           -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           (Pdb) print(y)
 | |
|           2
 | |
|           (Pdb) up
 | |
|           > <doctest foo-bar@baz[1]>(1)<module>()
 | |
|           -> calls_set_trace()
 | |
|           (Pdb) print(x)
 | |
|           1
 | |
|           (Pdb) continue
 | |
|           TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
| 
 | |
|         During interactive debugging, source code is shown, even for
 | |
|         doctest examples:
 | |
| 
 | |
|           >>> doc = '''
 | |
|           ... >>> def f(x):
 | |
|           ... ...     g(x*2)
 | |
|           ... >>> def g(x):
 | |
|           ... ...     print(x+3)
 | |
|           ... ...     import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           ... >>> f(3)
 | |
|           ... '''
 | |
|           >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo-bar@baz", "foo-bar@baz.py", 0)
 | |
|           >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
 | |
|           >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
 | |
|           ...    'list',     # list source from example 2
 | |
|           ...    'next',     # return from g()
 | |
|           ...    'list',     # list source from example 1
 | |
|           ...    'next',     # return from f()
 | |
|           ...    'list',     # list source from example 3
 | |
|           ...    'continue', # stop debugging
 | |
|           ...    ''])
 | |
|           >>> try: runner.run(test)
 | |
|           ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
 | |
|           ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
 | |
|           --Return--
 | |
|           > <doctest foo-bar@baz[1]>(3)g()->None
 | |
|           -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           (Pdb) list
 | |
|             1     def g(x):
 | |
|             2         print(x+3)
 | |
|             3  ->     import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|           [EOF]
 | |
|           (Pdb) next
 | |
|           --Return--
 | |
|           > <doctest foo-bar@baz[0]>(2)f()->None
 | |
|           -> g(x*2)
 | |
|           (Pdb) list
 | |
|             1     def f(x):
 | |
|             2  ->     g(x*2)
 | |
|           [EOF]
 | |
|           (Pdb) next
 | |
|           --Return--
 | |
|           > <doctest foo-bar@baz[2]>(1)<module>()->None
 | |
|           -> f(3)
 | |
|           (Pdb) list
 | |
|             1  -> f(3)
 | |
|           [EOF]
 | |
|           (Pdb) continue
 | |
|           **********************************************************************
 | |
|           File "foo-bar@baz.py", line 7, in foo-bar@baz
 | |
|           Failed example:
 | |
|               f(3)
 | |
|           Expected nothing
 | |
|           Got:
 | |
|               9
 | |
|           TestResults(failed=1, attempted=3)
 | |
|           """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def test_pdb_set_trace_nested():
 | |
|         """This illustrates more-demanding use of set_trace with nested functions.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         >>> class C(object):
 | |
|         ...     def calls_set_trace(self):
 | |
|         ...         y = 1
 | |
|         ...         import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
 | |
|         ...         self.f1()
 | |
|         ...         y = 2
 | |
|         ...     def f1(self):
 | |
|         ...         x = 1
 | |
|         ...         self.f2()
 | |
|         ...         x = 2
 | |
|         ...     def f2(self):
 | |
|         ...         z = 1
 | |
|         ...         z = 2
 | |
| 
 | |
|         >>> calls_set_trace = C().calls_set_trace
 | |
| 
 | |
|         >>> doc = '''
 | |
|         ... >>> a = 1
 | |
|         ... >>> calls_set_trace()
 | |
|         ... '''
 | |
|         >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
 | |
|         >>> runner = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
 | |
|         >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo-bar@baz", "foo-bar@baz.py", 0)
 | |
|         >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
 | |
|         >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
 | |
|         ...    'print(y)',  # print data defined in the function
 | |
|         ...    'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'print(z)',
 | |
|         ...    'up', 'print(x)',
 | |
|         ...    'up', 'print(y)',
 | |
|         ...    'up', 'print(foo)',
 | |
|         ...    'continue', # stop debugging
 | |
|         ...    ''])
 | |
| 
 | |
|         >>> try:
 | |
|         ...     runner.run(test)
 | |
|         ... finally:
 | |
|         ...     sys.stdin = real_stdin
 | |
|         ... # doctest: +REPORT_NDIFF
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(5)calls_set_trace()
 | |
|         -> self.f1()
 | |
|         (Pdb) print(y)
 | |
|         1
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         --Call--
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(7)f1()
 | |
|         -> def f1(self):
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(8)f1()
 | |
|         -> x = 1
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(9)f1()
 | |
|         -> self.f2()
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         --Call--
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(11)f2()
 | |
|         -> def f2(self):
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(12)f2()
 | |
|         -> z = 1
 | |
|         (Pdb) step
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(13)f2()
 | |
|         -> z = 2
 | |
|         (Pdb) print(z)
 | |
|         1
 | |
|         (Pdb) up
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(9)f1()
 | |
|         -> self.f2()
 | |
|         (Pdb) print(x)
 | |
|         1
 | |
|         (Pdb) up
 | |
|         > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(5)calls_set_trace()
 | |
|         -> self.f1()
 | |
|         (Pdb) print(y)
 | |
|         1
 | |
|         (Pdb) up
 | |
|         > <doctest foo-bar@baz[1]>(1)<module>()
 | |
|         -> calls_set_trace()
 | |
|         (Pdb) print(foo)
 | |
|         *** NameError: name 'foo' is not defined
 | |
|         (Pdb) continue
 | |
|         TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_DocTestSuite():
 | |
|     """DocTestSuite creates a unittest test suite from 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.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        We can also supply the module by name:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        The module need not contain any doctest examples:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest_no_doctests')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=0 errors=0 failures=0>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        The module need not contain any docstrings either:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest_no_docstrings')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=0 errors=0 failures=0>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        We can use the current module:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = test.sample_doctest.test_suite()
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        We can also provide a DocTestFinder:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest',
 | |
|          ...                          test_finder=finder)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        The DocTestFinder need not return any tests:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest_no_docstrings',
 | |
|          ...                          test_finder=finder)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=0 errors=0 failures=0>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        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.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=5>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        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.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        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.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=5>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        You can supply setUp and tearDown functions:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def setUp(t):
 | |
|          ...     import test.test_doctest
 | |
|          ...     test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def tearDown(t):
 | |
|          ...     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.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        But the tearDown restores sanity:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> import test.test_doctest
 | |
|          >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup
 | |
|          Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|          ...
 | |
|          AttributeError: module 'test.test_doctest' has no attribute 'sillySetup'
 | |
| 
 | |
|        The setUp and tearDown functions are passed test objects. Here
 | |
|        we'll use the setUp function to supply the missing variable y:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def setUp(test):
 | |
|          ...     test.globs['y'] = 1
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', setUp=setUp)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        Here, we didn't need to use a tearDown function because we
 | |
|        modified the test globals, which are a copy of the
 | |
|        sample_doctest module dictionary.  The test globals are
 | |
|        automatically cleared for us after a test.
 | |
|        """
 | |
| 
 | |
| 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',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 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',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              package='test')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        Support for using a package's __loader__.get_data() is also
 | |
|        provided.
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> import unittest, pkgutil, test
 | |
|          >>> added_loader = False
 | |
|          >>> if not hasattr(test, '__loader__'):
 | |
|          ...     test.__loader__ = pkgutil.get_loader(test)
 | |
|          ...     added_loader = True
 | |
|          >>> try:
 | |
|          ...     suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|          ...                                  'test_doctest2.txt',
 | |
|          ...                                  'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                                  package='test')
 | |
|          ...     suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          ... finally:
 | |
|          ...     if added_loader:
 | |
|          ...         del test.__loader__
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        '/' 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.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=1>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        If DocFileSuite is used from an interactive session, then files
 | |
|        are resolved relative to the directory of sys.argv[0]:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> import types, os.path, test.test_doctest
 | |
|          >>> save_argv = sys.argv
 | |
|          >>> sys.argv = [test.test_doctest.__file__]
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              package=types.ModuleType('__main__'))
 | |
|          >>> sys.argv = save_argv
 | |
| 
 | |
|        By setting `module_relative=False`, os-specific paths may be
 | |
|        used (including absolute paths and paths relative to the
 | |
|        working directory):
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> # Get the absolute path of the test package.
 | |
|          >>> test_doctest_path = os.path.abspath(test.test_doctest.__file__)
 | |
|          >>> test_pkg_path = os.path.split(test_doctest_path)[0]
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> # Use it to find the absolute path of test_doctest.txt.
 | |
|          >>> test_file = os.path.join(test_pkg_path, 'test_doctest.txt')
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite(test_file, module_relative=False)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=1>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        It is an error to specify `package` when `module_relative=False`:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite(test_file, module_relative=False,
 | |
|          ...                              package='test')
 | |
|          Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|          ValueError: Package may only be specified for module-relative paths.
 | |
| 
 | |
|        You can specify initial global variables:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest2.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'})
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 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',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                         optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE,
 | |
|          ...                              globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'})
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        And, you can provide setUp and tearDown functions:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def setUp(t):
 | |
|          ...     import test.test_doctest
 | |
|          ...     test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def tearDown(t):
 | |
|          ...     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',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              setUp=setUp, tearDown=tearDown)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=1>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        But the tearDown restores sanity:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> import test.test_doctest
 | |
|          >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup
 | |
|          Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|          ...
 | |
|          AttributeError: module 'test.test_doctest' has no attribute 'sillySetup'
 | |
| 
 | |
|        The setUp and tearDown functions are passed test objects.
 | |
|        Here, we'll use a setUp function to set the favorite color in
 | |
|        test_doctest.txt:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> def setUp(test):
 | |
|          ...     test.globs['favorite_color'] = 'blue'
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', setUp=setUp)
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=0>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        Here, we didn't need to use a tearDown function because we
 | |
|        modified the test globals.  The test globals are
 | |
|        automatically cleared for us after a test.
 | |
| 
 | |
|        Tests in a file run using `DocFileSuite` can also access the
 | |
|        `__file__` global, which is set to the name of the file
 | |
|        containing the tests:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest3.txt')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=0>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        If the tests contain non-ASCII characters, we have to specify which
 | |
|        encoding the file is encoded with. We do so by using the `encoding`
 | |
|        parameter:
 | |
| 
 | |
|          >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest2.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              'test_doctest4.txt',
 | |
|          ...                              encoding='utf-8')
 | |
|          >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|          <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
 | |
| 
 | |
|        """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_trailing_space_in_test():
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Trailing spaces in expected output are significant:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> x, y = 'foo', ''
 | |
|       >>> print(x, y)
 | |
|       foo \n
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| class Wrapper:
 | |
|     def __init__(self, func):
 | |
|         self.func = func
 | |
|         functools.update_wrapper(self, func)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
 | |
|         self.func(*args, **kwargs)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @Wrapper
 | |
| def test_look_in_unwrapped():
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Docstrings in wrapped functions must be detected as well.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> 'one other test'
 | |
|     'one other test'
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_unittest_reportflags():
 | |
|     """Default unittest reporting flags can be set to control reporting
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Here, we'll set the REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE option so we see
 | |
|     only the first failure of each test.  First, we'll look at the
 | |
|     output without the flag.  The file test_doctest.txt file has two
 | |
|     tests. They both fail if blank lines are disabled:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|       ...                          optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE)
 | |
|       >>> import unittest
 | |
|       >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|       >>> print(result.failures[0][1]) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|       Traceback ...
 | |
|       Failed example:
 | |
|           favorite_color
 | |
|       ...
 | |
|       Failed example:
 | |
|           if 1:
 | |
|       ...
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Note that we see both failures displayed.
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> old = doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(
 | |
|       ...    doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Now, when we run the test:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
|       >>> print(result.failures[0][1]) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|       Traceback ...
 | |
|       Failed example:
 | |
|           favorite_color
 | |
|       Exception raised:
 | |
|           ...
 | |
|           NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
 | |
|       <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|       <BLANKLINE>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     We get only the first failure.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If we give any reporting options when we set up the tests,
 | |
|     however:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
 | |
|       ...     optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE | doctest.REPORT_NDIFF)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Then the default eporting options are ignored:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
 | |
| 
 | |
|     *NOTE*: These doctest are intentionally not placed in raw string to depict
 | |
|     the trailing whitespace using `\x20` in the diff below.
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> print(result.failures[0][1]) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|       Traceback ...
 | |
|       Failed example:
 | |
|           favorite_color
 | |
|       ...
 | |
|       Failed example:
 | |
|           if 1:
 | |
|              print('a')
 | |
|              print()
 | |
|              print('b')
 | |
|       Differences (ndiff with -expected +actual):
 | |
|             a
 | |
|           - <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|           +\x20
 | |
|             b
 | |
|       <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|       <BLANKLINE>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Test runners can restore the formatting flags after they run:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       >>> ignored = doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(old)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_testfile(): r"""
 | |
| Tests for the `testfile()` function.  This function runs all the
 | |
| doctest examples in a given file.  In its simple invocation, it is
 | |
| called with the name of a file, which is taken to be relative to the
 | |
| calling module.  The return value is (#failures, #tests).
 | |
| 
 | |
| We don't want `-v` in sys.argv for these tests.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> save_argv = sys.argv
 | |
|     >>> if '-v' in sys.argv:
 | |
|     ...     sys.argv = [arg for arg in save_argv if arg != '-v']
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         favorite_color
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     1 items had failures:
 | |
|        1 of   2 in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     ***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (Note: we'll be clearing doctest.master after each call to
 | |
| `doctest.testfile`, to suppress warnings about multiple tests with the
 | |
| same name.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Globals may be specified with the `globs` and `extraglobs` parameters:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> globs = {'favorite_color': 'blue'}
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> extraglobs = {'favorite_color': 'red'}
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs,
 | |
|     ...                  extraglobs=extraglobs) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         favorite_color
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         'blue'
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         'red'
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     1 items had failures:
 | |
|        1 of   2 in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     ***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The file may be made relative to a given module or package, using the
 | |
| optional `module_relative` parameter:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs,
 | |
|     ...                  module_relative='test')
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Verbosity can be increased with the optional `verbose` parameter:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs, verbose=True)
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         favorite_color
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'blue'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         if 1:
 | |
|            print('a')
 | |
|            print()
 | |
|            print('b')
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         a
 | |
|         <BLANKLINE>
 | |
|         b
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     1 items passed all tests:
 | |
|        2 tests in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     2 tests in 1 items.
 | |
|     2 passed and 0 failed.
 | |
|     Test passed.
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The name of the test may be specified with the optional `name`
 | |
| parameter:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', name='newname')
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...", line 6, in newname
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The summary report may be suppressed with the optional `report`
 | |
| parameter:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', report=False)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         favorite_color
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         ...
 | |
|         NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The optional keyword argument `raise_on_error` can be used to raise an
 | |
| exception on the first error (which may be useful for postmortem
 | |
| debugging):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', raise_on_error=True)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|     doctest.UnexpectedException: ...
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the tests contain non-ASCII characters, the tests might fail, since
 | |
| it's unknown which encoding is used. The encoding can be specified
 | |
| using the optional keyword argument `encoding`:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt', encoding='latin-1') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...", line 7, in test_doctest4.txt
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         '...'
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         'f\xf6\xf6'
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         'f\xc3\xb6\xc3\xb6'
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     1 items had failures:
 | |
|        2 of   2 in test_doctest4.txt
 | |
|     ***Test Failed*** 2 failures.
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=2, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt', encoding='utf-8')
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Test the verbose output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt', encoding='utf-8', verbose=True)
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         'föö'
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'f\xf6\xf6'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         'bÄ…r'
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'b\u0105r'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     1 items passed all tests:
 | |
|        2 tests in test_doctest4.txt
 | |
|     2 tests in 1 items.
 | |
|     2 passed and 0 failed.
 | |
|     Test passed.
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
 | |
|     >>> doctest.master = None  # Reset master.
 | |
|     >>> sys.argv = save_argv
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_lineendings(): r"""
 | |
| *nix systems use \n line endings, while Windows systems use \r\n.  Python
 | |
| handles this using universal newline mode for reading files.  Let's make
 | |
| sure doctest does so (issue 8473) by creating temporary test files using each
 | |
| of the two line disciplines.  One of the two will be the "wrong" one for the
 | |
| platform the test is run on.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Windows line endings first:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import tempfile, os
 | |
|     >>> fn = tempfile.mktemp()
 | |
|     >>> with open(fn, 'wb') as f:
 | |
|     ...    f.write(b'Test:\r\n\r\n  >>> x = 1 + 1\r\n\r\nDone.\r\n')
 | |
|     35
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile(fn, module_relative=False, verbose=False)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
|     >>> os.remove(fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
| And now *nix line endings:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> fn = tempfile.mktemp()
 | |
|     >>> with open(fn, 'wb') as f:
 | |
|     ...     f.write(b'Test:\n\n  >>> x = 1 + 1\n\nDone.\n')
 | |
|     30
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testfile(fn, module_relative=False, verbose=False)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
 | |
|     >>> os.remove(fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_testmod(): r"""
 | |
| Tests for the testmod function.  More might be useful, but for now we're just
 | |
| testing the case raised by Issue 6195, where trying to doctest a C module would
 | |
| fail with a UnicodeDecodeError because doctest tried to read the "source" lines
 | |
| out of the binary module.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> import unicodedata
 | |
|     >>> doctest.testmod(unicodedata, verbose=False)
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=0, attempted=0)
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     os.fsencode("foo-bär@baz.py")
 | |
| except UnicodeEncodeError:
 | |
|     # Skip the test: the filesystem encoding is unable to encode the filename
 | |
|     pass
 | |
| else:
 | |
|     def test_unicode(): """
 | |
| Check doctest with a non-ascii filename:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> doc = '''
 | |
|     ... >>> raise Exception('clé')
 | |
|     ... '''
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
 | |
|     >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, {}, "foo-bär@baz", "foo-bär@baz.py", 0)
 | |
|     >>> test
 | |
|     <DocTest foo-bär@baz from foo-bär@baz.py:0 (1 example)>
 | |
|     >>> runner = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
 | |
|     >>> runner.run(test) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "foo-bär@baz.py", line 2, in foo-bär@baz
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         raise Exception('clé')
 | |
|     Exception raised:
 | |
|         Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|           File ...
 | |
|             exec(compile(example.source, filename, "single",
 | |
|           File "<doctest foo-bär@baz[0]>", line 1, in <module>
 | |
|             raise Exception('clé')
 | |
|         Exception: clé
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_CLI(): r"""
 | |
| The doctest module can be used to run doctests against an arbitrary file.
 | |
| These tests test this CLI functionality.
 | |
| 
 | |
| We'll use the support module's script_helpers for this, and write a test files
 | |
| to a temp dir to run the command against.  Due to a current limitation in
 | |
| script_helpers, though, we need a little utility function to turn the returned
 | |
| output into something we can doctest against:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def normalize(s):
 | |
|     ...     return '\n'.join(s.decode().splitlines())
 | |
| 
 | |
| With those preliminaries out of the way, we'll start with a file with two
 | |
| simple tests and no errors.  We'll run both the unadorned doctest command, and
 | |
| the verbose version, and then check the output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> from test.support import script_helper, temp_dir
 | |
|     >>> with temp_dir() as tmpdir:
 | |
|     ...     fn = os.path.join(tmpdir, 'myfile.doc')
 | |
|     ...     with open(fn, 'w') as f:
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('This is a very simple test file.\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   >>> 1 + 1\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   2\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   >>> "a"\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write("   'a'\n")
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('And that is it.\n')
 | |
|     ...     rc1, out1, err1 = script_helper.assert_python_ok(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', fn)
 | |
|     ...     rc2, out2, err2 = script_helper.assert_python_ok(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', '-v', fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
| With no arguments and passing tests, we should get no output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc1, out1, err1
 | |
|     (0, b'', b'')
 | |
| 
 | |
| With the verbose flag, we should see the test output, but no error output:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc2, err2
 | |
|     (0, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(out2))
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         1 + 1
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         "a"
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'a'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     1 items passed all tests:
 | |
|        2 tests in myfile.doc
 | |
|     2 tests in 1 items.
 | |
|     2 passed and 0 failed.
 | |
|     Test passed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Now we'll write a couple files, one with three tests, the other a python module
 | |
| with two tests, both of the files having "errors" in the tests that can be made
 | |
| non-errors by applying the appropriate doctest options to the run (ELLIPSIS in
 | |
| the first file, NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE in the second).  This combination will
 | |
| allow thoroughly testing the -f and -o flags, as well as the doctest command's
 | |
| ability to process more than one file on the command line and, since the second
 | |
| file ends in '.py', its handling of python module files (as opposed to straight
 | |
| text files).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> from test.support import script_helper, temp_dir
 | |
|     >>> with temp_dir() as tmpdir:
 | |
|     ...     fn = os.path.join(tmpdir, 'myfile.doc')
 | |
|     ...     with open(fn, 'w') as f:
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('This is another simple test file.\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   >>> 1 + 1\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   2\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   >>> "abcdef"\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write("   'a...f'\n")
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   >>> "ajkml"\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write("   'a...l'\n")
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('And that is it.\n')
 | |
|     ...     fn2 = os.path.join(tmpdir, 'myfile2.py')
 | |
|     ...     with open(fn2, 'w') as f:
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('def test_func():\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   \"\"\"\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   This is simple python test function.\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('       >>> 1 + 1\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('       2\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('       >>> "abc   def"\n')
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write("       'abc def'\n")
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write("\n")
 | |
|     ...         _ = f.write('   \"\"\"\n')
 | |
|     ...     rc1, out1, err1 = script_helper.assert_python_failure(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', fn, fn2)
 | |
|     ...     rc2, out2, err2 = script_helper.assert_python_ok(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', '-o', 'ELLIPSIS', fn)
 | |
|     ...     rc3, out3, err3 = script_helper.assert_python_ok(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', '-o', 'ELLIPSIS',
 | |
|     ...             '-o', 'NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE', fn, fn2)
 | |
|     ...     rc4, out4, err4 = script_helper.assert_python_failure(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', '-f', fn, fn2)
 | |
|     ...     rc5, out5, err5 = script_helper.assert_python_ok(
 | |
|     ...             '-m', 'doctest', '-v', '-o', 'ELLIPSIS',
 | |
|     ...             '-o', 'NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE', fn, fn2)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Our first test run will show the errors from the first file (doctest stops if a
 | |
| file has errors).  Note that doctest test-run error output appears on stdout,
 | |
| not stderr:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc1, err1
 | |
|     (1, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(out1))                # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...myfile.doc", line 4, in myfile.doc
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         "abcdef"
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         'a...f'
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         'abcdef'
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...myfile.doc", line 6, in myfile.doc
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         "ajkml"
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         'a...l'
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         'ajkml'
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     1 items had failures:
 | |
|        2 of   3 in myfile.doc
 | |
|     ***Test Failed*** 2 failures.
 | |
| 
 | |
| With -o ELLIPSIS specified, the second run, against just the first file, should
 | |
| produce no errors, and with -o NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE also specified, neither
 | |
| should the third, which ran against both files:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc2, out2, err2
 | |
|     (0, b'', b'')
 | |
|     >>> rc3, out3, err3
 | |
|     (0, b'', b'')
 | |
| 
 | |
| The fourth run uses FAIL_FAST, so we should see only one error:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc4, err4
 | |
|     (1, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(out4))                # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File "...myfile.doc", line 4, in myfile.doc
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         "abcdef"
 | |
|     Expected:
 | |
|         'a...f'
 | |
|     Got:
 | |
|         'abcdef'
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     1 items had failures:
 | |
|        1 of   2 in myfile.doc
 | |
|     ***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The fifth test uses verbose with the two options, so we should get verbose
 | |
| success output for the tests in both files:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc5, err5
 | |
|     (0, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(out5))
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         1 + 1
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         "abcdef"
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'a...f'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         "ajkml"
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'a...l'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     1 items passed all tests:
 | |
|        3 tests in myfile.doc
 | |
|     3 tests in 1 items.
 | |
|     3 passed and 0 failed.
 | |
|     Test passed.
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         1 + 1
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         2
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     Trying:
 | |
|         "abc   def"
 | |
|     Expecting:
 | |
|         'abc def'
 | |
|     ok
 | |
|     1 items had no tests:
 | |
|         myfile2
 | |
|     1 items passed all tests:
 | |
|        2 tests in myfile2.test_func
 | |
|     2 tests in 2 items.
 | |
|     2 passed and 0 failed.
 | |
|     Test passed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| We should also check some typical error cases.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Invalid file name:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(
 | |
|     ...         '-m', 'doctest', 'nosuchfile')
 | |
|     >>> rc, out
 | |
|     (1, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(err))                    # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
|       ...
 | |
|     FileNotFoundError: [Errno ...] No such file or directory: 'nosuchfile'
 | |
| 
 | |
| Invalid doctest option:
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(
 | |
|     ...         '-m', 'doctest', '-o', 'nosuchoption')
 | |
|     >>> rc, out
 | |
|     (2, b'')
 | |
|     >>> print(normalize(err))                    # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     usage...invalid...nosuchoption...
 | |
| 
 | |
| """
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_no_trailing_whitespace_stripping():
 | |
|     r"""
 | |
|     The fancy reports had a bug for a long time where any trailing whitespace on
 | |
|     the reported diff lines was stripped, making it impossible to see the
 | |
|     differences in line reported as different that differed only in the amount of
 | |
|     trailing whitespace.  The whitespace still isn't particularly visible unless
 | |
|     you use NDIFF, but at least it is now there to be found.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     *NOTE*: This snippet was intentionally put inside a raw string to get rid of
 | |
|     leading whitespace error in executing the example below
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> def f(x):
 | |
|     ...     r'''
 | |
|     ...     >>> print('\n'.join(['a    ', 'b']))
 | |
|     ...     a
 | |
|     ...     b
 | |
|     ...     '''
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     *NOTE*: These doctest are not placed in raw string to depict the trailing whitespace
 | |
|     using `\x20`
 | |
| 
 | |
|     >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
 | |
|     >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_NDIFF
 | |
|     >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
 | |
|     ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
 | |
|     **********************************************************************
 | |
|     File ..., line 3, in f
 | |
|     Failed example:
 | |
|         print('\n'.join(['a    ', 'b']))
 | |
|     Differences (ndiff with -expected +actual):
 | |
|         - a
 | |
|         + a
 | |
|           b
 | |
|     TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     *NOTE*: `\x20` is for checking the trailing whitespace on the +a line above.
 | |
|     We cannot use actual spaces there, as a commit hook prevents from committing
 | |
|     patches that contain trailing whitespace. More info on Issue 24746.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| ## Main
 | |
| ######################################################################
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_main():
 | |
|     # Check the doctest cases in doctest itself:
 | |
|     ret = support.run_doctest(doctest, verbosity=True)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Check the doctest cases defined here:
 | |
|     from test import test_doctest
 | |
|     support.run_doctest(test_doctest, verbosity=True)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Run unittests
 | |
|     support.run_unittest(__name__)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def test_coverage(coverdir):
 | |
|     trace = support.import_module('trace')
 | |
|     tracer = trace.Trace(ignoredirs=[sys.base_prefix, sys.base_exec_prefix,],
 | |
|                          trace=0, count=1)
 | |
|     tracer.run('test_main()')
 | |
|     r = tracer.results()
 | |
|     print('Writing coverage results...')
 | |
|     r.write_results(show_missing=True, summary=True,
 | |
|                     coverdir=coverdir)
 | |
| 
 | |
| if __name__ == '__main__':
 | |
|     if '-c' in sys.argv:
 | |
|         test_coverage('/tmp/doctest.cover')
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         test_main()
 |