| \section{\module{doctest} --- |
| Test docstrings represent reality} |
| |
| \declaremodule{standard}{doctest} |
| \moduleauthor{Tim Peters}{tim_one@users.sourceforge.net} |
| \sectionauthor{Tim Peters}{tim_one@users.sourceforge.net} |
| \sectionauthor{Moshe Zadka}{moshez@debian.org} |
| |
| \modulesynopsis{A framework for verifying examples in docstrings.} |
| |
| The \module{doctest} module searches a module's docstrings for text that looks |
| like an interactive Python session, then executes all such sessions to verify |
| they still work exactly as shown. Here's a complete but small example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| """ |
| This is module example. |
| |
| Example supplies one function, factorial. For example, |
| |
| >>> factorial(5) |
| 120 |
| """ |
| |
| def factorial(n): |
| """Return the factorial of n, an exact integer >= 0. |
| |
| If the result is small enough to fit in an int, return an int. |
| Else return a long. |
| |
| >>> [factorial(n) for n in range(6)] |
| [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120] |
| >>> [factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)] |
| [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120] |
| >>> factorial(30) |
| 265252859812191058636308480000000L |
| >>> factorial(30L) |
| 265252859812191058636308480000000L |
| >>> factorial(-1) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| ValueError: n must be >= 0 |
| |
| Factorials of floats are OK, but the float must be an exact integer: |
| >>> factorial(30.1) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| ValueError: n must be exact integer |
| >>> factorial(30.0) |
| 265252859812191058636308480000000L |
| |
| It must also not be ridiculously large: |
| >>> factorial(1e100) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| OverflowError: n too large |
| """ |
| |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % allow LaTeX to break here. |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| |
| import math |
| if not n >= 0: |
| raise ValueError("n must be >= 0") |
| if math.floor(n) != n: |
| raise ValueError("n must be exact integer") |
| if n+1 == n: # catch a value like 1e300 |
| raise OverflowError("n too large") |
| result = 1 |
| factor = 2 |
| while factor <= n: |
| try: |
| result *= factor |
| except OverflowError: |
| result *= long(factor) |
| factor += 1 |
| return result |
| |
| def _test(): |
| import doctest |
| return doctest.testmod() |
| |
| if __name__ == "__main__": |
| _test() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| If you run \file{example.py} directly from the command line, |
| \module{doctest} works its magic: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| $ python example.py |
| $ |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| There's no output! That's normal, and it means all the examples |
| worked. Pass \programopt{-v} to the script, and \module{doctest} |
| prints a detailed log of what it's trying, and prints a summary at the |
| end: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| $ python example.py -v |
| Trying: factorial(5) |
| Expecting: 120 |
| ok |
| Trying: [factorial(n) for n in range(6)] |
| Expecting: [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120] |
| ok |
| Trying: [factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)] |
| Expecting: [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120] |
| ok |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| And so on, eventually ending with: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| Trying: factorial(1e100) |
| Expecting: |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| OverflowError: n too large |
| ok |
| 2 items passed all tests: |
| 1 tests in example |
| 8 tests in example.factorial |
| 9 tests in 2 items. |
| 9 passed and 0 failed. |
| Test passed. |
| $ |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| That's all you need to know to start making productive use of |
| \module{doctest}! Jump in. The following sections provide full |
| details. Note that there are many examples of doctests in |
| the standard Python test suite and libraries. |
| |
| \subsection{Simple Usage} |
| |
| The simplest way to start using doctest (but not necessarily the way |
| you'll continue to do it) is to end each module \module{M} with: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def _test(): |
| import doctest |
| return doctest.testmod() |
| |
| if __name__ == "__main__": |
| _test() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \module{doctest} then examines docstrings in the module calling |
| \function{testmod()}. |
| |
| Running the module as a script causes the examples in the docstrings |
| to get executed and verified: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| python M.py |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the |
| failing example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout, |
| and the final line of output is |
| \samp{'***Test Failed*** \var{N} failures.'}, where \var{N} is the |
| number of examples that failed. |
| |
| Run it with the \programopt{-v} switch instead: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| python M.py -v |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to standard |
| output, along with assorted summaries at the end. |
| |
| You can force verbose mode by passing \code{verbose=True} to |
| \function{testmod()}, or |
| prohibit it by passing \code{verbose=False}. In either of those cases, |
| \code{sys.argv} is not examined by \function{testmod()}. |
| |
| In any case, \function{testmod()} returns a 2-tuple of ints \code{(\var{f}, |
| \var{t})}, where \var{f} is the number of docstring examples that |
| failed and \var{t} is the total number of docstring examples |
| attempted. |
| |
| \subsection{Which Docstrings Are Examined?} |
| |
| The module docstring, and all function, class and method docstrings are |
| searched. Objects imported into the module are not searched. |
| |
| In addition, if \code{M.__test__} exists and "is true", it must be a |
| dict, and each entry maps a (string) name to a function object, class |
| object, or string. Function and class object docstrings found from |
| \code{M.__test__} are searched, and strings are treated as if they |
| were docstrings. In output, a key \code{K} in \code{M.__test__} appears |
| with name |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| <name of M>.__test__.K |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Any classes found are recursively searched similarly, to test docstrings in |
| their contained methods and nested classes. |
| |
| \versionchanged[A "private name" concept is deprecated and no longer |
| documented]{2.4} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{What's the Execution Context?} |
| |
| By default, each time \function{testmod()} finds a docstring to test, it |
| uses a \emph{shallow copy} of \module{M}'s globals, so that running tests |
| doesn't change the module's real globals, and so that one test in |
| \module{M} can't leave behind crumbs that accidentally allow another test |
| to work. This means examples can freely use any names defined at top-level |
| in \module{M}, and names defined earlier in the docstring being run. |
| Examples cannot see names defined in other docstrings. |
| |
| You can force use of your own dict as the execution context by passing |
| \code{globs=your_dict} to \function{testmod()} instead. |
| |
| \subsection{What About Exceptions?} |
| |
| No problem: just paste in the expected traceback. Since |
| tracebacks contain details that are likely to change |
| rapidly (for example, exact file paths and line numbers), this is one |
| case where doctest works hard to be flexible in what it accepts. |
| This makes the full story involved, but you really don't have |
| to remember much. Simple example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> [1, 2, 3].remove(42) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| ValueError: list.remove(x): x not in list |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| That doctest succeeds if, and only if, \exception{ValueError} is raised, |
| with the \samp{list.remove(x): x not in list} detail as shown. |
| |
| The expected output for an exception is divided into four parts. |
| First, an example may produce some normal output before an exception |
| is raised, although that's unusual. The "normal output" is taken to |
| be everything until the first "Traceback" line, and is usually an |
| empty string. Next, the traceback line must be one of these two, and |
| indented the same as the first line in the example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| Traceback (innermost last): |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The most interesting part is the last part: the line(s) starting with the |
| exception type and detail. This is usually the last line of a traceback, |
| but can extend across any number of lines. After the "Traceback" line, |
| doctest simply ignores everything until the first line indented the same as |
| the first line of the example, \emph{and} starting with an alphanumeric |
| character. This example illustrates the complexities that are possible: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> print 1, 2; raise ValueError('printed 1\nand 2\n but not 3') |
| 1 2 |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... indented the same, but doesn't start with an alphanumeric |
| not indented the same, so ignored too |
| File "/Python23/lib/doctest.py", line 442, in _run_examples_inner |
| compileflags, 1) in globs |
| File "<string>", line 1, in ? # and all these are ignored |
| ValueError: printed 1 |
| and 2 |
| but not 3 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The first (\samp{1 2}) and last three (starting with |
| \exception{ValueError}) lines are compared, and the rest are ignored. |
| |
| Best practice is to omit the ``File'' lines, unless they add |
| significant documentation value to the example. So the example above |
| is probably better as: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> print 1, 2; raise ValueError('printed 1\nand 2\n but not 3') |
| 1 2 |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| ValueError: printed 1 |
| and 2 |
| but not 3 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note the tracebacks are treated very specially. In particular, in the |
| rewritten example, the use of \samp{...} is independent of doctest's |
| \constant{ELLIPSIS} option. The ellipsis in that example could |
| be left out, or could just as well be three (or three hundred) commas. |
| |
| \versionchanged[The abilities to check both normal output and an |
| exception in a single example, and to have a multi-line |
| exception detail, were added]{2.4} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Option Flags and Directives\label{doctest-options}} |
| |
| A number of option flags control various aspects of doctest's comparison |
| behavior. Symbolic names for the flags are supplied as module constants, |
| which can be or'ed together and passed to various functions. The names |
| can also be used in doctest directives (see below). |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} |
| By default, if an expected output block contains just \code{1}, |
| an actual output block containing just \code{1} or just |
| \code{True} is considered to be a match, and similarly for \code{0} |
| versus \code{False}. When \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} is |
| specified, neither substitution is allowed. The default behavior |
| caters to that Python changed the return type of many functions |
| from integer to boolean; doctests expecting "little integer" |
| output still work in these cases. This option will probably go |
| away, but not for several years. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE} |
| By default, if an expected output block contains a line |
| containing only the string \code{<BLANKLINE>}, then that line |
| will match a blank line in the actual output. Because a |
| genuinely blank line delimits the expected output, this is |
| the only way to communicate that a blank line is expected. When |
| \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE} is specified, this substitution |
| is not allowed. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE} |
| When specified, all sequences of whitespace (blanks and newlines) are |
| treated as equal. Any sequence of whitespace within the expected |
| output will match any sequence of whitespace within the actual output. |
| By default, whitespace must match exactly. |
| \constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE} is especially useful when a line |
| of expected output is very long, and you want to wrap it across |
| multiple lines in your source. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{ELLIPSIS} |
| When specified, an ellipsis marker (\code{...}) in the expected output |
| can match any substring in the actual output. This includes |
| substrings that span line boundaries, and empty substrings, so it's |
| best to keep usage of this simple. Complicated uses can lead to the |
| same kinds of "oops, it matched too much!" surprises that \regexp{.*} |
| is prone to in regular expressions. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{UNIFIED_DIFF} |
| When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and |
| actual outputs are displayed using a unified diff. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| \begin{datadesc}{CONTEXT_DIFF} |
| When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and |
| actual outputs will be displayed using a context diff. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| |
| |
| A "doctest directive" is a trailing Python comment on a line of a doctest |
| example: |
| |
| \begin{productionlist}[doctest] |
| \production{directive} |
| {"#" "doctest:" \token{on_or_off} \token{directive_name}} |
| \production{on_or_off} |
| {"+" | "-"} |
| \production{directive_name} |
| {"DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE" | "NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE" | ...} |
| \end{productionlist} |
| |
| Whitespace is not allowed between the \code{+} or \code{-} and the |
| directive name. The directive name can be any of the option names |
| explained above. |
| |
| The doctest directives appearing in a single example modify doctest's |
| behavior for that single example. Use \code{+} to enable the named |
| behavior, or \code{-} to disable it. |
| |
| For example, this test passes: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> print 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] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Without the directive it would fail, both because the actual output |
| doesn't have two blanks before the single-digit list elements, and |
| because the actual output is on a single line. This test also passes, |
| and requires a directive to do so: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> print range(20) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS |
| [0, 1, ..., 18, 19] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Only one directive per physical line is accepted. If you want to |
| use multiple directives for a single example, you can add |
| \samp{...} lines to your example containing only directives: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> print range(20) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS |
| ... #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
| [0, 1, ..., 18, 19] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note that since all options are disabled by default, and directives apply |
| only to the example they appear in, enabling options (via \code{+} in a |
| directive) is usually the only meaningful choice. However, option flags |
| can also be passed to functions that run doctests, establishing different |
| defaults. In such cases, disabling an option via \code{-} in a directive |
| can be useful. |
| |
| \versionchanged[Constants \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE}, |
| \constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE}, \constant{ELLIPSIS}, |
| \constant{UNIFIED_DIFF}, and \constant{CONTEXT_DIFF} |
| were added; by default \code{<BLANKLINE>} in expected output |
| matches an empty line in actual output; and doctest directives |
| were added]{2.4} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Advanced Usage} |
| |
| Several module level functions are available for controlling how doctests |
| are run. |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{debug}{module, name} |
| Debug a single docstring containing doctests. |
| |
| Provide the \var{module} (or dotted name of the module) containing the |
| docstring to be debugged and the \var{name} (within the module) of the |
| object with the docstring to be debugged. |
| |
| The doctest examples are extracted (see function \function{testsource()}), |
| and written to a temporary file. The Python debugger, \refmodule{pdb}, |
| is then invoked on that file. |
| \versionadded{2.3} |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{testmod}{\optional{m}\optional{, name}\optional{, |
| globs}\optional{, verbose}\optional{, |
| isprivate}\optional{, report}\optional{, |
| optionflags}\optional{, extraglobs}\optional{, |
| raise_on_error}} |
| |
| All arguments are optional, and all except for \var{m} should be |
| specified in keyword form. |
| |
| Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable |
| from module \var{m} (or the current module if \var{m} is not supplied |
| or is \code{None}), starting with \code{\var{m}.__doc__}. |
| |
| Also test examples reachable from dict \code{\var{m}.__test__}, if it |
| exists and is not \code{None}. \code{\var{m}.__test__} maps |
| names (strings) to functions, classes and strings; function and class |
| docstrings are searched for examples; strings are searched directly, |
| as if they were docstrings. |
| |
| Only docstrings attached to objects belonging to module \var{m} are |
| searched. |
| |
| Return \samp{(\var{failure_count}, \var{test_count})}. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{name} gives the name of the module; by default, |
| or if \code{None}, \code{\var{m}.__name__} is used. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{globs} gives a dict to be used as the globals |
| when executing examples; by default, or if \code{None}, |
| \code{\var{m}.__dict__} is used. A new shallow copy of this dict is |
| created for each docstring with examples, so that each docstring's |
| examples start with a clean slate. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{extraglobs} gives a dict merged into the |
| globals used to execute examples. This works like |
| \method{dict.update()}: if \var{globs} and \var{extraglobs} have a |
| common key, the associated value in \var{extraglobs} appears in the |
| combined dict. By default, or if \code{None}, no extra globals are |
| used. This is an advanced feature that allows parameterization of |
| doctests. For example, a doctest can be written for a base class, using |
| a generic name for the class, then reused to test any number of |
| subclasses by passing an \var{extraglobs} dict mapping the generic |
| name to the subclass to be tested. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{verbose} prints lots of stuff if true, and prints |
| only failures if false; by default, or if \code{None}, it's true |
| if and only if \code{'-v'} is in \code{sys.argv}. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{report} prints a summary at the end when true, |
| else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is |
| detailed, else the summary is very brief (in fact, empty if all tests |
| passed). |
| |
| Optional argument \var{optionflags} or's together option flags. See |
| see section \ref{doctest-options}. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{raise_on_error} defaults to false. If true, |
| an exception is raised upon the first failure or unexpected exception |
| in an example. This allows failures to be post-mortem debugged. |
| Default behavior is to continue running examples. |
| |
| Optional argument \var{isprivate} specifies a function used to |
| determine whether a name is private. The default function treats |
| all names as public. \var{isprivate} can be set to |
| \code{doctest.is_private} to skip over names that are |
| private according to Python's underscore naming convention. |
| \deprecated{2.4}{\var{isprivate} was a stupid idea -- don't use it. |
| If you need to skip tests based on name, filter the list returned by |
| \code{DocTestFinder.find()} instead.} |
| |
| \versionchanged[The parameter \var{optionflags} was added]{2.3} |
| |
| \versionchanged[The parameters \var{extraglobs} and \var{raise_on_error} |
| were added]{2.4} |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{testsource}{module, name} |
| Extract the doctest examples from a docstring. |
| |
| Provide the \var{module} (or dotted name of the module) containing the |
| tests to be extracted and the \var{name} (within the module) of the object |
| with the docstring containing the tests to be extracted. |
| |
| The doctest examples are returned as a string containing Python |
| code. The expected output blocks in the examples are converted |
| to Python comments. |
| \versionadded{2.3} |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{DocTestSuite}{\optional{module}} |
| Convert doctest tests for a module to a |
| \class{\refmodule{unittest}.TestSuite}. |
| |
| The returned \class{TestSuite} is to be run by the unittest framework |
| and runs each doctest in the module. If any of the doctests fail, |
| then the synthesized unit test fails, and a \exception{DocTestTestFailure} |
| exception is raised showing the name of the file containing the test and a |
| (sometimes approximate) line number. |
| |
| The optional \var{module} argument provides the module to be tested. It |
| can be a module object or a (possibly dotted) module name. If not |
| specified, the module calling this function is used. |
| |
| Example using one of the many ways that the \refmodule{unittest} module |
| can use a \class{TestSuite}: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| import unittest |
| import doctest |
| import my_module_with_doctests |
| |
| suite = doctest.DocTestSuite(my_module_with_doctests) |
| runner = unittest.TextTestRunner() |
| runner.run(suite) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \versionadded{2.3} |
| \warning{This function does not currently search \code{M.__test__} |
| and its search technique does not exactly match \function{testmod()} in |
| every detail. Future versions will bring the two into convergence.} |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{How are Docstring Examples Recognized?} |
| |
| In most cases a copy-and-paste of an interactive console session works |
| fine, but doctest isn't trying to do an exact emulation of any specific |
| Python shell. All hard tab characters are expanded to spaces, using |
| 8-column tab stops. If you don't believe tabs should mean that, too |
| bad: don't use hard tabs, or write your own \class{DocTestParser} |
| class. |
| |
| \versionchanged[Expanding tabs to spaces is new; previous versions |
| tried to preserve hard tabs, with confusing results]{2.4} |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> # comments are ignored |
| >>> x = 12 |
| >>> x |
| 12 |
| >>> if x == 13: |
| ... print "yes" |
| ... else: |
| ... print "no" |
| ... print "NO" |
| ... print "NO!!!" |
| ... |
| no |
| NO |
| NO!!! |
| >>> |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Any expected output must immediately follow the final |
| \code{'>\code{>}>~'} or \code{'...~'} line containing the code, and |
| the expected output (if any) extends to the next \code{'>\code{>}>~'} |
| or all-whitespace line. |
| |
| The fine print: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| |
| \item Expected output cannot contain an all-whitespace line, since such a |
| line is taken to signal the end of expected output. If expected |
| output does contain a blank line, put \code{<BLANKLINE>} in your |
| doctest example each place a blank line is expected. |
| \versionchanged[\code{<BLANKLINE>} was added; there was no way to |
| use expected output containing empty lines in |
| previous versions]{2.4} |
| |
| \item Output to stdout is captured, but not output to stderr (exception |
| tracebacks are captured via a different means). |
| |
| \item If you continue a line via backslashing in an interactive session, |
| or for any other reason use a backslash, you should use a raw |
| docstring, which will preserve your backslahses exactly as you type |
| them: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> def f(x): |
| ... r'''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n''' |
| >>> print f.__doc__ |
| Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Otherwise, the backslash will be interpreted as part of the string. |
| E.g., the "\textbackslash" above would be interpreted as a newline |
| character. Alternatively, you can double each backslash in the |
| doctest version (and not use a raw string): |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> def f(x): |
| ... '''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\\n''' |
| >>> print f.__doc__ |
| Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \item The starting column doesn't matter: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> assert "Easy!" |
| >>> import math |
| >>> math.floor(1.9) |
| 1.0 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| and as many leading whitespace characters are stripped from the |
| expected output as appeared in the initial \code{'>\code{>}>~'} line |
| that started the example. |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| \subsection{Warnings} |
| |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| |
| \item \module{doctest} is serious about requiring exact matches in expected |
| output. If even a single character doesn't match, the test fails. This |
| will probably surprise you a few times, as you learn exactly what Python |
| does and doesn't guarantee about output. For example, when printing a |
| dict, Python doesn't guarantee that the key-value pairs will be printed |
| in any particular order, so a test like |
| |
| % Hey! What happened to Monty Python examples? |
| % Tim: ask Guido -- it's his example! |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> foo() |
| {"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"} |
| >>> |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| is vulnerable! One workaround is to do |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> foo() == {"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"} |
| True |
| >>> |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| instead. Another is to do |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> d = foo().items() |
| >>> d.sort() |
| >>> d |
| [('Harry', 'broomstick'), ('Hermione', 'hippogryph')] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| There are others, but you get the idea. |
| |
| Another bad idea is to print things that embed an object address, like |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> id(1.0) # certain to fail some of the time |
| 7948648 |
| >>> |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Floating-point numbers are also subject to small output variations across |
| platforms, because Python defers to the platform C library for float |
| formatting, and C libraries vary widely in quality here. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> 1./7 # risky |
| 0.14285714285714285 |
| >>> print 1./7 # safer |
| 0.142857142857 |
| >>> print round(1./7, 6) # much safer |
| 0.142857 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Numbers of the form \code{I/2.**J} are safe across all platforms, and I |
| often contrive doctest examples to produce numbers of that form: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> 3./4 # utterly safe |
| 0.75 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Simple fractions are also easier for people to understand, and that makes |
| for better documentation. |
| |
| \item Be careful if you have code that must only execute once. |
| |
| If you have module-level code that must only execute once, a more foolproof |
| definition of \function{_test()} is |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def _test(): |
| import doctest, sys |
| doctest.testmod() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \item WYSIWYG isn't always the case, starting in Python 2.3. The |
| string form of boolean results changed from \code{'0'} and |
| \code{'1'} to \code{'False'} and \code{'True'} in Python 2.3. |
| This makes it clumsy to write a doctest showing boolean results that |
| passes under multiple versions of Python. In Python 2.3, by default, |
| and as a special case, if an expected output block consists solely |
| of \code{'0'} and the actual output block consists solely of |
| \code{'False'}, that's accepted as an exact match, and similarly for |
| \code{'1'} versus \code{'True'}. This behavior can be turned off by |
| passing the new (in 2.3) module constant |
| \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} as the value of \function{testmod()}'s |
| new (in 2.3) optional \var{optionflags} argument. Some years after |
| the integer spellings of booleans are history, this hack will |
| probably be removed again. |
| |
| \end{enumerate} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Soapbox} |
| |
| The first word in ``doctest'' is ``doc,'' and that's why the author |
| wrote \refmodule{doctest}: to keep documentation up to date. It so |
| happens that \refmodule{doctest} makes a pleasant unit testing |
| environment, but that's not its primary purpose. |
| |
| Choose docstring examples with care. There's an art to this that |
| needs to be learned---it may not be natural at first. Examples should |
| add genuine value to the documentation. A good example can often be |
| worth many words. If possible, show just a few normal cases, show |
| endcases, show interesting subtle cases, and show an example of each |
| kind of exception that can be raised. You're probably testing for |
| endcases and subtle cases anyway in an interactive shell: |
| \refmodule{doctest} wants to make it as easy as possible to capture |
| those sessions, and will verify they continue to work as designed |
| forever after. |
| |
| If done with care, the examples will be invaluable for your users, and |
| will pay back the time it takes to collect them many times over as the |
| years go by and things change. I'm still amazed at how often one of |
| my \refmodule{doctest} examples stops working after a ``harmless'' |
| change. |
| |
| For exhaustive testing, or testing boring cases that add no value to the |
| docs, define a \code{__test__} dict instead. That's what it's for. |