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Florent Xicluna2a903b22010-02-27 13:31:23 +00001# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002"""
3Test script for doctest.
4"""
5
Florent Xicluna6257a7b2010-03-31 22:01:03 +00006import sys
Barry Warsaw04f357c2002-07-23 19:04:11 +00007from test import test_support
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00008import doctest
9
Nick Coghlana2053472008-12-14 10:54:50 +000010# NOTE: There are some additional tests relating to interaction with
11# zipimport in the test_zipimport_support test module.
12
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +000013######################################################################
14## Sample Objects (used by test cases)
15######################################################################
16
17def sample_func(v):
18 """
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +000019 Blah blah
20
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +000021 >>> print sample_func(22)
22 44
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +000023
24 Yee ha!
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +000025 """
26 return v+v
27
28class SampleClass:
29 """
30 >>> print 1
31 1
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +000032
33 >>> # comments get ignored. so are empty PS1 and PS2 prompts:
34 >>>
35 ...
36
37 Multiline example:
38 >>> sc = SampleClass(3)
39 >>> for i in range(10):
40 ... sc = sc.double()
41 ... print sc.get(),
42 6 12 24 48 96 192 384 768 1536 3072
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +000043 """
44 def __init__(self, val):
45 """
46 >>> print SampleClass(12).get()
47 12
48 """
49 self.val = val
50
51 def double(self):
52 """
53 >>> print SampleClass(12).double().get()
54 24
55 """
56 return SampleClass(self.val + self.val)
57
58 def get(self):
59 """
60 >>> print SampleClass(-5).get()
61 -5
62 """
63 return self.val
64
65 def a_staticmethod(v):
66 """
67 >>> print SampleClass.a_staticmethod(10)
68 11
69 """
70 return v+1
71 a_staticmethod = staticmethod(a_staticmethod)
72
73 def a_classmethod(cls, v):
74 """
75 >>> print SampleClass.a_classmethod(10)
76 12
77 >>> print SampleClass(0).a_classmethod(10)
78 12
79 """
80 return v+2
81 a_classmethod = classmethod(a_classmethod)
82
83 a_property = property(get, doc="""
84 >>> print SampleClass(22).a_property
85 22
86 """)
87
88 class NestedClass:
89 """
90 >>> x = SampleClass.NestedClass(5)
91 >>> y = x.square()
92 >>> print y.get()
93 25
94 """
95 def __init__(self, val=0):
96 """
97 >>> print SampleClass.NestedClass().get()
98 0
99 """
100 self.val = val
101 def square(self):
102 return SampleClass.NestedClass(self.val*self.val)
103 def get(self):
104 return self.val
105
106class SampleNewStyleClass(object):
107 r"""
108 >>> print '1\n2\n3'
109 1
110 2
111 3
112 """
113 def __init__(self, val):
114 """
115 >>> print SampleNewStyleClass(12).get()
116 12
117 """
118 self.val = val
119
120 def double(self):
121 """
122 >>> print SampleNewStyleClass(12).double().get()
123 24
124 """
125 return SampleNewStyleClass(self.val + self.val)
126
127 def get(self):
128 """
129 >>> print SampleNewStyleClass(-5).get()
130 -5
131 """
132 return self.val
133
134######################################################################
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +0000135## Fake stdin (for testing interactive debugging)
136######################################################################
137
138class _FakeInput:
139 """
140 A fake input stream for pdb's interactive debugger. Whenever a
141 line is read, print it (to simulate the user typing it), and then
142 return it. The set of lines to return is specified in the
143 constructor; they should not have trailing newlines.
144 """
145 def __init__(self, lines):
146 self.lines = lines
147
148 def readline(self):
149 line = self.lines.pop(0)
150 print line
151 return line+'\n'
152
153######################################################################
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000154## Test Cases
155######################################################################
156
157def test_Example(): r"""
158Unit tests for the `Example` class.
159
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000160Example is a simple container class that holds:
161 - `source`: A source string.
162 - `want`: An expected output string.
163 - `exc_msg`: An expected exception message string (or None if no
164 exception is expected).
165 - `lineno`: A line number (within the docstring).
166 - `indent`: The example's indentation in the input string.
167 - `options`: An option dictionary, mapping option flags to True or
168 False.
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000169
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000170These attributes are set by the constructor. `source` and `want` are
171required; the other attributes all have default values:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000172
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000173 >>> example = doctest.Example('print 1', '1\n')
174 >>> (example.source, example.want, example.exc_msg,
175 ... example.lineno, example.indent, example.options)
176 ('print 1\n', '1\n', None, 0, 0, {})
177
178The first three attributes (`source`, `want`, and `exc_msg`) may be
179specified positionally; the remaining arguments should be specified as
180keyword arguments:
181
182 >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list'
183 >>> example = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg,
184 ... lineno=5, indent=4,
185 ... options={doctest.ELLIPSIS: True})
186 >>> (example.source, example.want, example.exc_msg,
187 ... example.lineno, example.indent, example.options)
188 ('[].pop()\n', '', 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n', 5, 4, {8: True})
189
190The constructor normalizes the `source` string to end in a newline:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000191
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000192 Source spans a single line: no terminating newline.
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000193 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1', '1\n')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000194 >>> e.source, e.want
195 ('print 1\n', '1\n')
196
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000197 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1\n', '1\n')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000198 >>> e.source, e.want
199 ('print 1\n', '1\n')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000200
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000201 Source spans multiple lines: require terminating newline.
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000202 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1;\nprint 2\n', '1\n2\n')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000203 >>> e.source, e.want
204 ('print 1;\nprint 2\n', '1\n2\n')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000205
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000206 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1;\nprint 2', '1\n2\n')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000207 >>> e.source, e.want
208 ('print 1;\nprint 2\n', '1\n2\n')
209
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000210 Empty source string (which should never appear in real examples)
211 >>> e = doctest.Example('', '')
212 >>> e.source, e.want
213 ('\n', '')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000214
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000215The constructor normalizes the `want` string to end in a newline,
216unless it's the empty string:
217
218 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1', '1\n')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000219 >>> e.source, e.want
220 ('print 1\n', '1\n')
221
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000222 >>> e = doctest.Example('print 1', '1')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000223 >>> e.source, e.want
224 ('print 1\n', '1\n')
225
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000226 >>> e = doctest.Example('print', '')
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000227 >>> e.source, e.want
228 ('print\n', '')
Edward Lopera6b68322004-08-26 00:05:43 +0000229
230The constructor normalizes the `exc_msg` string to end in a newline,
231unless it's `None`:
232
233 Message spans one line
234 >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list'
235 >>> e = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg)
236 >>> e.exc_msg
237 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
238
239 >>> exc_msg = 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
240 >>> e = doctest.Example('[].pop()', '', exc_msg)
241 >>> e.exc_msg
242 'IndexError: pop from an empty list\n'
243
244 Message spans multiple lines
245 >>> exc_msg = 'ValueError: 1\n 2'
246 >>> e = doctest.Example('raise ValueError("1\n 2")', '', exc_msg)
247 >>> e.exc_msg
248 'ValueError: 1\n 2\n'
249
250 >>> exc_msg = 'ValueError: 1\n 2\n'
251 >>> e = doctest.Example('raise ValueError("1\n 2")', '', exc_msg)
252 >>> e.exc_msg
253 'ValueError: 1\n 2\n'
254
255 Empty (but non-None) exception message (which should never appear
256 in real examples)
257 >>> exc_msg = ''
258 >>> e = doctest.Example('raise X()', '', exc_msg)
259 >>> e.exc_msg
260 '\n'
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000261"""
262
263def test_DocTest(): r"""
264Unit tests for the `DocTest` class.
265
266DocTest is a collection of examples, extracted from a docstring, along
267with information about where the docstring comes from (a name,
268filename, and line number). The docstring is parsed by the `DocTest`
269constructor:
270
271 >>> docstring = '''
272 ... >>> print 12
273 ... 12
274 ...
275 ... Non-example text.
276 ...
277 ... >>> print 'another\example'
278 ... another
279 ... example
280 ... '''
281 >>> globs = {} # globals to run the test in.
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +0000282 >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
283 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test',
284 ... 'some_file', 20)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000285 >>> print test
286 <DocTest some_test from some_file:20 (2 examples)>
287 >>> len(test.examples)
288 2
289 >>> e1, e2 = test.examples
290 >>> (e1.source, e1.want, e1.lineno)
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000291 ('print 12\n', '12\n', 1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000292 >>> (e2.source, e2.want, e2.lineno)
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000293 ("print 'another\\example'\n", 'another\nexample\n', 6)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000294
295Source information (name, filename, and line number) is available as
296attributes on the doctest object:
297
298 >>> (test.name, test.filename, test.lineno)
299 ('some_test', 'some_file', 20)
300
301The line number of an example within its containing file is found by
302adding the line number of the example and the line number of its
303containing test:
304
305 >>> test.lineno + e1.lineno
306 21
307 >>> test.lineno + e2.lineno
308 26
309
310If the docstring contains inconsistant leading whitespace in the
311expected output of an example, then `DocTest` will raise a ValueError:
312
313 >>> docstring = r'''
314 ... >>> print 'bad\nindentation'
315 ... bad
316 ... indentation
317 ... '''
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +0000318 >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000319 Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper00f8da72004-08-26 18:05:07 +0000320 ValueError: line 4 of the docstring for some_test has inconsistent leading whitespace: 'indentation'
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000321
322If the docstring contains inconsistent leading whitespace on
323continuation lines, then `DocTest` will raise a ValueError:
324
325 >>> docstring = r'''
326 ... >>> print ('bad indentation',
327 ... ... 2)
328 ... ('bad', 'indentation')
329 ... '''
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +0000330 >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000331 Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper00f8da72004-08-26 18:05:07 +0000332 ValueError: line 2 of the docstring for some_test has inconsistent leading whitespace: '... 2)'
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000333
334If there's no blank space after a PS1 prompt ('>>>'), then `DocTest`
335will raise a ValueError:
336
337 >>> docstring = '>>>print 1\n1'
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +0000338 >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000339 Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper7c748462004-08-09 02:06:06 +0000340 ValueError: line 1 of the docstring for some_test lacks blank after >>>: '>>>print 1'
341
342If there's no blank space after a PS2 prompt ('...'), then `DocTest`
343will raise a ValueError:
344
345 >>> docstring = '>>> if 1:\n...print 1\n1'
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +0000346 >>> parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, 'some_test', 'filename', 0)
Edward Loper7c748462004-08-09 02:06:06 +0000347 Traceback (most recent call last):
348 ValueError: line 2 of the docstring for some_test lacks blank after ...: '...print 1'
349
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000350"""
351
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000352def test_DocTestFinder(): r"""
353Unit tests for the `DocTestFinder` class.
354
355DocTestFinder is used to extract DocTests from an object's docstring
356and the docstrings of its contained objects. It can be used with
357modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods, classmethods, and
358properties.
359
360Finding Tests in Functions
361~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
362For a function whose docstring contains examples, DocTestFinder.find()
363will return a single test (for that function's docstring):
364
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000365 >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000366
367We'll simulate a __file__ attr that ends in pyc:
368
369 >>> import test.test_doctest
370 >>> old = test.test_doctest.__file__
371 >>> test.test_doctest.__file__ = 'test_doctest.pyc'
372
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000373 >>> tests = finder.find(sample_func)
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +0000374
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +0000375 >>> print tests # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Florent Xicluna2a903b22010-02-27 13:31:23 +0000376 [<DocTest sample_func from ...:17 (1 example)>]
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +0000377
Tim Peters4de7c5c2004-08-23 22:38:05 +0000378The exact name depends on how test_doctest was invoked, so allow for
379leading path components.
380
381 >>> tests[0].filename # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
382 '...test_doctest.py'
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000383
384 >>> test.test_doctest.__file__ = old
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +0000385
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000386
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000387 >>> e = tests[0].examples[0]
Tim Petersbb431472004-08-09 03:51:46 +0000388 >>> (e.source, e.want, e.lineno)
389 ('print sample_func(22)\n', '44\n', 3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000390
Edward Loper32ddbf72004-09-13 05:47:24 +0000391By default, tests are created for objects with no docstring:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000392
393 >>> def no_docstring(v):
394 ... pass
Tim Peters958cc892004-09-13 14:53:28 +0000395 >>> finder.find(no_docstring)
396 []
Edward Loper32ddbf72004-09-13 05:47:24 +0000397
398However, the optional argument `exclude_empty` to the DocTestFinder
399constructor can be used to exclude tests for objects with empty
400docstrings:
401
402 >>> def no_docstring(v):
403 ... pass
404 >>> excl_empty_finder = doctest.DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=True)
405 >>> excl_empty_finder.find(no_docstring)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000406 []
407
408If the function has a docstring with no examples, then a test with no
409examples is returned. (This lets `DocTestRunner` collect statistics
410about which functions have no tests -- but is that useful? And should
411an empty test also be created when there's no docstring?)
412
413 >>> def no_examples(v):
414 ... ''' no doctest examples '''
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000415 >>> finder.find(no_examples) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
416 [<DocTest no_examples from ...:1 (no examples)>]
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000417
418Finding Tests in Classes
419~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
420For a class, DocTestFinder will create a test for the class's
421docstring, and will recursively explore its contents, including
422methods, classmethods, staticmethods, properties, and nested classes.
423
424 >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
425 >>> tests = finder.find(SampleClass)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000426 >>> for t in tests:
427 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000428 3 SampleClass
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000429 3 SampleClass.NestedClass
430 1 SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
431 1 SampleClass.__init__
432 2 SampleClass.a_classmethod
433 1 SampleClass.a_property
434 1 SampleClass.a_staticmethod
435 1 SampleClass.double
436 1 SampleClass.get
437
438New-style classes are also supported:
439
440 >>> tests = finder.find(SampleNewStyleClass)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000441 >>> for t in tests:
442 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
443 1 SampleNewStyleClass
444 1 SampleNewStyleClass.__init__
445 1 SampleNewStyleClass.double
446 1 SampleNewStyleClass.get
447
448Finding Tests in Modules
449~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
450For a module, DocTestFinder will create a test for the class's
451docstring, and will recursively explore its contents, including
452functions, classes, and the `__test__` dictionary, if it exists:
453
454 >>> # A module
Christian Heimesc756d002007-11-27 21:34:01 +0000455 >>> import types
456 >>> m = types.ModuleType('some_module')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000457 >>> def triple(val):
458 ... '''
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000459 ... >>> print triple(11)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000460 ... 33
461 ... '''
462 ... return val*3
463 >>> m.__dict__.update({
464 ... 'sample_func': sample_func,
465 ... 'SampleClass': SampleClass,
466 ... '__doc__': '''
467 ... Module docstring.
468 ... >>> print 'module'
469 ... module
470 ... ''',
471 ... '__test__': {
472 ... 'd': '>>> print 6\n6\n>>> print 7\n7\n',
473 ... 'c': triple}})
474
475 >>> finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
476 >>> # Use module=test.test_doctest, to prevent doctest from
477 >>> # ignoring the objects since they weren't defined in m.
478 >>> import test.test_doctest
479 >>> tests = finder.find(m, module=test.test_doctest)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000480 >>> for t in tests:
481 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
482 1 some_module
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000483 3 some_module.SampleClass
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000484 3 some_module.SampleClass.NestedClass
485 1 some_module.SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
486 1 some_module.SampleClass.__init__
487 2 some_module.SampleClass.a_classmethod
488 1 some_module.SampleClass.a_property
489 1 some_module.SampleClass.a_staticmethod
490 1 some_module.SampleClass.double
491 1 some_module.SampleClass.get
Tim Petersc5684782004-09-13 01:07:12 +0000492 1 some_module.__test__.c
493 2 some_module.__test__.d
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000494 1 some_module.sample_func
495
496Duplicate Removal
497~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
498If a single object is listed twice (under different names), then tests
499will only be generated for it once:
500
Tim Petersf3f57472004-08-08 06:11:48 +0000501 >>> from test import doctest_aliases
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcf81ff982009-06-14 21:20:40 +0000502 >>> assert doctest_aliases.TwoNames.f
503 >>> assert doctest_aliases.TwoNames.g
Edward Loper32ddbf72004-09-13 05:47:24 +0000504 >>> tests = excl_empty_finder.find(doctest_aliases)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000505 >>> print len(tests)
506 2
507 >>> print tests[0].name
Tim Petersf3f57472004-08-08 06:11:48 +0000508 test.doctest_aliases.TwoNames
509
510 TwoNames.f and TwoNames.g are bound to the same object.
511 We can't guess which will be found in doctest's traversal of
512 TwoNames.__dict__ first, so we have to allow for either.
513
514 >>> tests[1].name.split('.')[-1] in ['f', 'g']
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000515 True
516
Tim Petersbf0400a2006-06-05 01:43:03 +0000517Empty Tests
518~~~~~~~~~~~
519By default, an object with no doctests doesn't create any tests:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000520
Tim Petersbf0400a2006-06-05 01:43:03 +0000521 >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(SampleClass)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000522 >>> for t in tests:
523 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000524 3 SampleClass
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000525 3 SampleClass.NestedClass
526 1 SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
Tim Peters958cc892004-09-13 14:53:28 +0000527 1 SampleClass.__init__
Tim Petersbf0400a2006-06-05 01:43:03 +0000528 2 SampleClass.a_classmethod
529 1 SampleClass.a_property
530 1 SampleClass.a_staticmethod
Tim Peters958cc892004-09-13 14:53:28 +0000531 1 SampleClass.double
532 1 SampleClass.get
533
534By default, that excluded objects with no doctests. exclude_empty=False
535tells it to include (empty) tests for objects with no doctests. This feature
536is really to support backward compatibility in what doctest.master.summarize()
537displays.
538
Tim Petersbf0400a2006-06-05 01:43:03 +0000539 >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=False).find(SampleClass)
Tim Peters958cc892004-09-13 14:53:28 +0000540 >>> for t in tests:
541 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000542 3 SampleClass
Tim Peters958cc892004-09-13 14:53:28 +0000543 3 SampleClass.NestedClass
544 1 SampleClass.NestedClass.__init__
Edward Loper32ddbf72004-09-13 05:47:24 +0000545 0 SampleClass.NestedClass.get
546 0 SampleClass.NestedClass.square
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000547 1 SampleClass.__init__
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000548 2 SampleClass.a_classmethod
549 1 SampleClass.a_property
550 1 SampleClass.a_staticmethod
551 1 SampleClass.double
552 1 SampleClass.get
553
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000554Turning off Recursion
555~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
556DocTestFinder can be told not to look for tests in contained objects
557using the `recurse` flag:
558
559 >>> tests = doctest.DocTestFinder(recurse=False).find(SampleClass)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000560 >>> for t in tests:
561 ... print '%2s %s' % (len(t.examples), t.name)
Edward Loper4ae900f2004-09-21 03:20:34 +0000562 3 SampleClass
Edward Loperb51b2342004-08-17 16:37:12 +0000563
564Line numbers
565~~~~~~~~~~~~
566DocTestFinder finds the line number of each example:
567
568 >>> def f(x):
569 ... '''
570 ... >>> x = 12
571 ...
572 ... some text
573 ...
574 ... >>> # examples are not created for comments & bare prompts.
575 ... >>>
576 ... ...
577 ...
578 ... >>> for x in range(10):
579 ... ... print x,
580 ... 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000581 ... >>> x//2
Edward Loperb51b2342004-08-17 16:37:12 +0000582 ... 6
583 ... '''
584 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
585 >>> [e.lineno for e in test.examples]
586 [1, 9, 12]
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000587"""
588
Edward Loper00f8da72004-08-26 18:05:07 +0000589def test_DocTestParser(): r"""
590Unit tests for the `DocTestParser` class.
591
592DocTestParser is used to parse docstrings containing doctest examples.
593
594The `parse` method divides a docstring into examples and intervening
595text:
596
597 >>> s = '''
598 ... >>> x, y = 2, 3 # no output expected
599 ... >>> if 1:
600 ... ... print x
601 ... ... print y
602 ... 2
603 ... 3
604 ...
605 ... Some text.
606 ... >>> x+y
607 ... 5
608 ... '''
609 >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
610 >>> for piece in parser.parse(s):
611 ... if isinstance(piece, doctest.Example):
612 ... print 'Example:', (piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno)
613 ... else:
614 ... print ' Text:', `piece`
615 Text: '\n'
616 Example: ('x, y = 2, 3 # no output expected\n', '', 1)
617 Text: ''
618 Example: ('if 1:\n print x\n print y\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
619 Text: '\nSome text.\n'
620 Example: ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
621 Text: ''
622
623The `get_examples` method returns just the examples:
624
625 >>> for piece in parser.get_examples(s):
626 ... print (piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno)
627 ('x, y = 2, 3 # no output expected\n', '', 1)
628 ('if 1:\n print x\n print y\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
629 ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
630
631The `get_doctest` method creates a Test from the examples, along with the
632given arguments:
633
634 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(s, {}, 'name', 'filename', lineno=5)
635 >>> (test.name, test.filename, test.lineno)
636 ('name', 'filename', 5)
637 >>> for piece in test.examples:
638 ... print (piece.source, piece.want, piece.lineno)
639 ('x, y = 2, 3 # no output expected\n', '', 1)
640 ('if 1:\n print x\n print y\n', '2\n3\n', 2)
641 ('x+y\n', '5\n', 9)
642"""
643
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000644class test_DocTestRunner:
645 def basics(): r"""
646Unit tests for the `DocTestRunner` class.
647
648DocTestRunner is used to run DocTest test cases, and to accumulate
649statistics. Here's a simple DocTest case we can use:
650
651 >>> def f(x):
652 ... '''
653 ... >>> x = 12
654 ... >>> print x
655 ... 12
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000656 ... >>> x//2
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000657 ... 6
658 ... '''
659 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
660
661The main DocTestRunner interface is the `run` method, which runs a
662given DocTest case in a given namespace (globs). It returns a tuple
663`(f,t)`, where `f` is the number of failed tests and `t` is the number
664of tried tests.
665
666 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000667 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000668
669If any example produces incorrect output, then the test runner reports
670the failure and proceeds to the next example:
671
672 >>> def f(x):
673 ... '''
674 ... >>> x = 12
675 ... >>> print x
676 ... 14
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000677 ... >>> x//2
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000678 ... 6
679 ... '''
680 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
681 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000682 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000683 Trying:
684 x = 12
685 Expecting nothing
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000686 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000687 Trying:
688 print x
689 Expecting:
690 14
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000691 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000692 File ..., line 4, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000693 Failed example:
694 print x
695 Expected:
696 14
697 Got:
698 12
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000699 Trying:
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000700 x//2
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000701 Expecting:
702 6
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000703 ok
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000704 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000705"""
706 def verbose_flag(): r"""
707The `verbose` flag makes the test runner generate more detailed
708output:
709
710 >>> def f(x):
711 ... '''
712 ... >>> x = 12
713 ... >>> print x
714 ... 12
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000715 ... >>> x//2
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000716 ... 6
717 ... '''
718 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
719
720 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True).run(test)
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000721 Trying:
722 x = 12
723 Expecting nothing
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000724 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000725 Trying:
726 print x
727 Expecting:
728 12
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000729 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000730 Trying:
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000731 x//2
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000732 Expecting:
733 6
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000734 ok
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000735 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000736
737If the `verbose` flag is unspecified, then the output will be verbose
738iff `-v` appears in sys.argv:
739
740 >>> # Save the real sys.argv list.
741 >>> old_argv = sys.argv
742
743 >>> # If -v does not appear in sys.argv, then output isn't verbose.
744 >>> sys.argv = ['test']
745 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner().run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000746 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000747
748 >>> # If -v does appear in sys.argv, then output is verbose.
749 >>> sys.argv = ['test', '-v']
750 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner().run(test)
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000751 Trying:
752 x = 12
753 Expecting nothing
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000754 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000755 Trying:
756 print x
757 Expecting:
758 12
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000759 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000760 Trying:
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000761 x//2
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +0000762 Expecting:
763 6
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000764 ok
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000765 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000766
767 >>> # Restore sys.argv
768 >>> sys.argv = old_argv
769
770In the remaining examples, the test runner's verbosity will be
771explicitly set, to ensure that the test behavior is consistent.
772 """
773 def exceptions(): r"""
774Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s exception handling.
775
776An expected exception is specified with a traceback message. The
777lines between the first line and the type/value may be omitted or
778replaced with any other string:
779
780 >>> def f(x):
781 ... '''
782 ... >>> x = 12
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000783 ... >>> print x//0
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000784 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
785 ... ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
786 ... '''
787 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
788 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000789 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000790
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000791An example may not generate output before it raises an exception; if
792it does, then the traceback message will not be recognized as
793signaling an expected exception, so the example will be reported as an
794unexpected exception:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000795
796 >>> def f(x):
797 ... '''
798 ... >>> x = 12
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000799 ... >>> print 'pre-exception output', x//0
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000800 ... pre-exception output
801 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
802 ... ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
803 ... '''
804 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
805 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000806 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
807 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000808 File ..., line 4, in f
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000809 Failed example:
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000810 print 'pre-exception output', x//0
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000811 Exception raised:
812 ...
813 ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000814 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000815
816Exception messages may contain newlines:
817
818 >>> def f(x):
819 ... r'''
820 ... >>> raise ValueError, 'multi\nline\nmessage'
821 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
822 ... ValueError: multi
823 ... line
824 ... message
825 ... '''
826 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
827 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000828 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000829
830If an exception is expected, but an exception with the wrong type or
831message is raised, then it is reported as a failure:
832
833 >>> def f(x):
834 ... r'''
835 ... >>> raise ValueError, 'message'
836 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
837 ... ValueError: wrong message
838 ... '''
839 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
840 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +0000841 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000842 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000843 File ..., line 3, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000844 Failed example:
845 raise ValueError, 'message'
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000846 Expected:
847 Traceback (most recent call last):
848 ValueError: wrong message
849 Got:
850 Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +0000851 ...
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000852 ValueError: message
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000853 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000854
Tim Peters1fbf9c52004-09-04 17:21:02 +0000855However, IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL can be used to allow a mismatch in the
856detail:
857
858 >>> def f(x):
859 ... r'''
860 ... >>> raise ValueError, 'message' #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
861 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
862 ... ValueError: wrong message
863 ... '''
864 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
865 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000866 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters1fbf9c52004-09-04 17:21:02 +0000867
Nick Coghlandfb45df2010-04-28 14:29:06 +0000868IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL also ignores difference in exception formatting
869between Python versions. For example, in Python 3.x, the module path of
870the exception is in the output, but this will fail under Python 2:
871
872 >>> def f(x):
873 ... r'''
874 ... >>> from httplib import HTTPException
875 ... >>> raise HTTPException('message')
876 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
877 ... httplib.HTTPException: message
878 ... '''
879 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
880 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
881 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
882 **********************************************************************
883 File ..., line 4, in f
884 Failed example:
885 raise HTTPException('message')
886 Expected:
887 Traceback (most recent call last):
888 httplib.HTTPException: message
889 Got:
890 Traceback (most recent call last):
891 ...
892 HTTPException: message
893 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
894
895But in Python 2 the module path is not included, an therefore a test must look
896like the following test to succeed in Python 2. But that test will fail under
897Python 3.
898
899 >>> def f(x):
900 ... r'''
901 ... >>> from httplib import HTTPException
902 ... >>> raise HTTPException('message')
903 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
904 ... HTTPException: message
905 ... '''
906 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
907 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
908 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
909
910However, with IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL, the module name of the exception
911(if any) will be ignored:
912
913 >>> def f(x):
914 ... r'''
915 ... >>> from httplib import HTTPException
916 ... >>> raise HTTPException('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
917 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
918 ... HTTPException: message
919 ... '''
920 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
921 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
922 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
923
924The module path will be completely ignored, so two different module paths will
925still pass if IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL is given. This is intentional, so it can
926be used when exceptions have changed module.
927
928 >>> def f(x):
929 ... r'''
930 ... >>> from httplib import HTTPException
931 ... >>> raise HTTPException('message') #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
932 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
933 ... foo.bar.HTTPException: message
934 ... '''
935 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
936 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
937 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
938
Tim Peters1fbf9c52004-09-04 17:21:02 +0000939But IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL does not allow a mismatch in the exception type:
940
941 >>> def f(x):
942 ... r'''
943 ... >>> raise ValueError, 'message' #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
944 ... Traceback (most recent call last):
945 ... TypeError: wrong type
946 ... '''
947 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
948 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
949 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
950 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000951 File ..., line 3, in f
Tim Peters1fbf9c52004-09-04 17:21:02 +0000952 Failed example:
953 raise ValueError, 'message' #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
954 Expected:
955 Traceback (most recent call last):
956 TypeError: wrong type
957 Got:
958 Traceback (most recent call last):
959 ...
960 ValueError: message
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000961 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters1fbf9c52004-09-04 17:21:02 +0000962
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000963If an exception is raised but not expected, then it is reported as an
964unexpected exception:
965
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000966 >>> def f(x):
967 ... r'''
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000968 ... >>> 1//0
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000969 ... 0
970 ... '''
971 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
972 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +0000973 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000974 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +0000975 File ..., line 3, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000976 Failed example:
Tim Peters1c5bc1c2006-03-28 07:28:40 +0000977 1//0
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000978 Exception raised:
979 Traceback (most recent call last):
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +0000980 ...
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000981 ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +0000982 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000983"""
984 def optionflags(): r"""
985Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s option flag handling.
986
987Several option flags can be used to customize the behavior of the test
988runner. These are defined as module constants in doctest, and passed
Georg Brandlf725b952008-01-05 19:44:22 +0000989to the DocTestRunner constructor (multiple constants should be ORed
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +0000990together).
991
992The DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 flag disables matches between True/False
993and 1/0:
994
995 >>> def f(x):
996 ... '>>> True\n1\n'
997
998 >>> # Without the flag:
999 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1000 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001001 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001002
1003 >>> # With the flag:
1004 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1005 >>> flags = doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1
1006 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001007 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001008 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001009 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001010 Failed example:
1011 True
1012 Expected:
1013 1
1014 Got:
1015 True
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001016 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001017
1018The DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag disables the match between blank lines
1019and the '<BLANKLINE>' marker:
1020
1021 >>> def f(x):
1022 ... '>>> print "a\\n\\nb"\na\n<BLANKLINE>\nb\n'
1023
1024 >>> # Without the flag:
1025 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1026 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001027 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001028
1029 >>> # With the flag:
1030 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1031 >>> flags = doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE
1032 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001033 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001034 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001035 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001036 Failed example:
1037 print "a\n\nb"
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001038 Expected:
1039 a
1040 <BLANKLINE>
1041 b
1042 Got:
1043 a
1044 <BLANKLINE>
1045 b
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001046 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001047
1048The NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE flag causes all sequences of whitespace to be
1049treated as equal:
1050
1051 >>> def f(x):
1052 ... '>>> print 1, 2, 3\n 1 2\n 3'
1053
1054 >>> # Without the flag:
1055 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1056 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001057 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001058 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001059 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001060 Failed example:
1061 print 1, 2, 3
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001062 Expected:
1063 1 2
1064 3
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001065 Got:
1066 1 2 3
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001067 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001068
1069 >>> # With the flag:
1070 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1071 >>> flags = doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1072 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001073 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001074
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +00001075 An example from the docs:
1076 >>> print range(20) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1077 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
1078 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]
1079
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001080The ELLIPSIS flag causes ellipsis marker ("...") in the expected
1081output to match any substring in the actual output:
1082
1083 >>> def f(x):
1084 ... '>>> print range(15)\n[0, 1, 2, ..., 14]\n'
1085
1086 >>> # Without the flag:
1087 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1088 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001089 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001090 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001091 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001092 Failed example:
1093 print range(15)
1094 Expected:
1095 [0, 1, 2, ..., 14]
1096 Got:
1097 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001098 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001099
1100 >>> # With the flag:
1101 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1102 >>> flags = doctest.ELLIPSIS
1103 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001104 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001105
Tim Peterse594bee2004-08-22 01:47:51 +00001106 ... also matches nothing:
Tim Peters1cf3aa62004-08-19 06:49:33 +00001107
1108 >>> for i in range(100):
Tim Peterse594bee2004-08-22 01:47:51 +00001109 ... print i**2, #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1110 0 1...4...9 16 ... 36 49 64 ... 9801
Tim Peters1cf3aa62004-08-19 06:49:33 +00001111
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +00001112 ... can be surprising; e.g., this test passes:
Tim Peters26b3ebb2004-08-19 08:10:08 +00001113
1114 >>> for i in range(21): #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peterse594bee2004-08-22 01:47:51 +00001115 ... print i,
1116 0 1 2 ...1...2...0
Tim Peters26b3ebb2004-08-19 08:10:08 +00001117
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +00001118 Examples from the docs:
1119
1120 >>> print range(20) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS
1121 [0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
1122
1123 >>> print range(20) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1124 ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1125 [0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
1126
Tim Peters711bf302006-04-25 03:31:36 +00001127The SKIP flag causes an example to be skipped entirely. I.e., the
1128example is not run. It can be useful in contexts where doctest
1129examples serve as both documentation and test cases, and an example
1130should be included for documentation purposes, but should not be
1131checked (e.g., because its output is random, or depends on resources
1132which would be unavailable.) The SKIP flag can also be used for
1133'commenting out' broken examples.
1134
1135 >>> import unavailable_resource # doctest: +SKIP
1136 >>> unavailable_resource.do_something() # doctest: +SKIP
1137 >>> unavailable_resource.blow_up() # doctest: +SKIP
1138 Traceback (most recent call last):
1139 ...
1140 UncheckedBlowUpError: Nobody checks me.
1141
1142 >>> import random
1143 >>> print random.random() # doctest: +SKIP
1144 0.721216923889
1145
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001146The REPORT_UDIFF flag causes failures that involve multi-line expected
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001147and actual outputs to be displayed using a unified diff:
1148
1149 >>> def f(x):
1150 ... r'''
1151 ... >>> print '\n'.join('abcdefg')
1152 ... a
1153 ... B
1154 ... c
1155 ... d
1156 ... f
1157 ... g
1158 ... h
1159 ... '''
1160
1161 >>> # Without the flag:
1162 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1163 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001164 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001165 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001166 File ..., line 3, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001167 Failed example:
1168 print '\n'.join('abcdefg')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001169 Expected:
1170 a
1171 B
1172 c
1173 d
1174 f
1175 g
1176 h
1177 Got:
1178 a
1179 b
1180 c
1181 d
1182 e
1183 f
1184 g
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001185 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001186
1187 >>> # With the flag:
1188 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001189 >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_UDIFF
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001190 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001191 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001192 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001193 File ..., line 3, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001194 Failed example:
1195 print '\n'.join('abcdefg')
Edward Loper56629292004-08-26 01:31:56 +00001196 Differences (unified diff with -expected +actual):
Tim Peterse7edcb82004-08-26 05:44:27 +00001197 @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001198 a
1199 -B
1200 +b
1201 c
1202 d
1203 +e
1204 f
1205 g
1206 -h
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001207 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001208
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001209The REPORT_CDIFF flag causes failures that involve multi-line expected
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001210and actual outputs to be displayed using a context diff:
1211
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001212 >>> # Reuse f() from the REPORT_UDIFF example, above.
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001213 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001214 >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_CDIFF
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001215 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001216 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001217 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001218 File ..., line 3, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001219 Failed example:
1220 print '\n'.join('abcdefg')
Edward Loper56629292004-08-26 01:31:56 +00001221 Differences (context diff with expected followed by actual):
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001222 ***************
Tim Peterse7edcb82004-08-26 05:44:27 +00001223 *** 1,7 ****
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001224 a
1225 ! B
1226 c
1227 d
1228 f
1229 g
1230 - h
Tim Peterse7edcb82004-08-26 05:44:27 +00001231 --- 1,7 ----
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001232 a
1233 ! b
1234 c
1235 d
1236 + e
1237 f
1238 g
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001239 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001240
1241
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001242The REPORT_NDIFF flag causes failures to use the difflib.Differ algorithm
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001243used by the popular ndiff.py utility. This does intraline difference
1244marking, as well as interline differences.
1245
1246 >>> def f(x):
1247 ... r'''
1248 ... >>> print "a b c d e f g h i j k l m"
1249 ... a b c d e f g h i j k 1 m
1250 ... '''
1251 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +00001252 >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_NDIFF
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001253 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001254 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001255 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001256 File ..., line 3, in f
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001257 Failed example:
1258 print "a b c d e f g h i j k l m"
1259 Differences (ndiff with -expected +actual):
1260 - a b c d e f g h i j k 1 m
1261 ? ^
1262 + a b c d e f g h i j k l m
1263 ? + ++ ^
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001264 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=1)
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001265
1266The REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE supresses result output after the first
1267failing example:
1268
1269 >>> def f(x):
1270 ... r'''
1271 ... >>> print 1 # first success
1272 ... 1
1273 ... >>> print 2 # first failure
1274 ... 200
1275 ... >>> print 3 # second failure
1276 ... 300
1277 ... >>> print 4 # second success
1278 ... 4
1279 ... >>> print 5 # third failure
1280 ... 500
1281 ... '''
1282 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1283 >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
1284 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001285 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001286 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001287 File ..., line 5, in f
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001288 Failed example:
1289 print 2 # first failure
1290 Expected:
1291 200
1292 Got:
1293 2
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001294 TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001295
1296However, output from `report_start` is not supressed:
1297
1298 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=True, optionflags=flags).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001299 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001300 Trying:
1301 print 1 # first success
1302 Expecting:
1303 1
1304 ok
1305 Trying:
1306 print 2 # first failure
1307 Expecting:
1308 200
1309 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001310 File ..., line 5, in f
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001311 Failed example:
1312 print 2 # first failure
1313 Expected:
1314 200
1315 Got:
1316 2
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001317 TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001318
1319For the purposes of REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE, unexpected exceptions
1320count as failures:
1321
1322 >>> def f(x):
1323 ... r'''
1324 ... >>> print 1 # first success
1325 ... 1
1326 ... >>> raise ValueError(2) # first failure
1327 ... 200
1328 ... >>> print 3 # second failure
1329 ... 300
1330 ... >>> print 4 # second success
1331 ... 4
1332 ... >>> print 5 # third failure
1333 ... 500
1334 ... '''
1335 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1336 >>> flags = doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
1337 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False, optionflags=flags).run(test)
1338 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1339 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001340 File ..., line 5, in f
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001341 Failed example:
1342 raise ValueError(2) # first failure
1343 Exception raised:
1344 ...
1345 ValueError: 2
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001346 TestResults(failed=3, attempted=5)
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +00001347
Tim Petersad2ef332006-05-10 02:43:01 +00001348New option flags can also be registered, via register_optionflag(). Here
1349we reach into doctest's internals a bit.
1350
1351 >>> unlikely = "UNLIKELY_OPTION_NAME"
1352 >>> unlikely in doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME
1353 False
1354 >>> new_flag_value = doctest.register_optionflag(unlikely)
1355 >>> unlikely in doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME
1356 True
1357
1358Before 2.4.4/2.5, registering a name more than once erroneously created
1359more than one flag value. Here we verify that's fixed:
1360
1361 >>> redundant_flag_value = doctest.register_optionflag(unlikely)
1362 >>> redundant_flag_value == new_flag_value
1363 True
1364
1365Clean up.
1366 >>> del doctest.OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[unlikely]
1367
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00001368 """
1369
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001370 def option_directives(): r"""
1371Tests of `DocTestRunner`'s option directive mechanism.
1372
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001373Option directives can be used to turn option flags on or off for a
1374single example. To turn an option on for an example, follow that
1375example with a comment of the form ``# doctest: +OPTION``:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001376
1377 >>> def f(x): r'''
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001378 ... >>> print range(10) # should fail: no ellipsis
1379 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1380 ...
1381 ... >>> print range(10) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1382 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1383 ... '''
1384 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1385 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001386 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001387 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001388 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001389 Failed example:
1390 print range(10) # should fail: no ellipsis
1391 Expected:
1392 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1393 Got:
1394 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001395 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001396
1397To turn an option off for an example, follow that example with a
1398comment of the form ``# doctest: -OPTION``:
1399
1400 >>> def f(x): r'''
1401 ... >>> print range(10)
1402 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1403 ...
1404 ... >>> # should fail: no ellipsis
1405 ... >>> print range(10) # doctest: -ELLIPSIS
1406 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1407 ... '''
1408 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1409 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False,
1410 ... optionflags=doctest.ELLIPSIS).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001411 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001412 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001413 File ..., line 6, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001414 Failed example:
1415 print range(10) # doctest: -ELLIPSIS
1416 Expected:
1417 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1418 Got:
1419 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001420 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001421
1422Option directives affect only the example that they appear with; they
1423do not change the options for surrounding examples:
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +00001424
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001425 >>> def f(x): r'''
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001426 ... >>> print range(10) # Should fail: no ellipsis
1427 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1428 ...
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001429 ... >>> print range(10) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001430 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1431 ...
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001432 ... >>> print range(10) # Should fail: no ellipsis
1433 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1434 ... '''
1435 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1436 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001437 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001438 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001439 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001440 Failed example:
1441 print range(10) # Should fail: no ellipsis
1442 Expected:
1443 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1444 Got:
1445 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001446 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001447 File ..., line 8, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001448 Failed example:
1449 print range(10) # Should fail: no ellipsis
1450 Expected:
1451 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1452 Got:
1453 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001454 TestResults(failed=2, attempted=3)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001455
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001456Multiple options may be modified by a single option directive. They
1457may be separated by whitespace, commas, or both:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001458
1459 >>> def f(x): r'''
1460 ... >>> print range(10) # Should fail
1461 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001462 ... >>> print range(10) # Should succeed
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001463 ... ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001464 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1465 ... '''
1466 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1467 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001468 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001469 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001470 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001471 Failed example:
1472 print range(10) # Should fail
1473 Expected:
1474 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1475 Got:
1476 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001477 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001478
1479 >>> def f(x): r'''
1480 ... >>> print range(10) # Should fail
1481 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1482 ... >>> print range(10) # Should succeed
1483 ... ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS,+NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1484 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1485 ... '''
1486 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1487 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001488 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001489 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001490 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001491 Failed example:
1492 print range(10) # Should fail
1493 Expected:
1494 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1495 Got:
1496 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001497 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001498
1499 >>> def f(x): r'''
1500 ... >>> print range(10) # Should fail
1501 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1502 ... >>> print range(10) # Should succeed
1503 ... ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS, +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1504 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1505 ... '''
1506 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1507 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001508 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001509 **********************************************************************
Tim Peters17b56372004-09-11 17:33:27 +00001510 File ..., line 2, in f
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00001511 Failed example:
1512 print range(10) # Should fail
1513 Expected:
1514 [0, 1, ..., 9]
1515 Got:
1516 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001517 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001518
1519The option directive may be put on the line following the source, as
1520long as a continuation prompt is used:
1521
1522 >>> def f(x): r'''
1523 ... >>> print range(10)
1524 ... ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1525 ... [0, 1, ..., 9]
1526 ... '''
1527 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1528 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001529 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Edward Loper8e4a34b2004-08-12 02:34:27 +00001530
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001531For examples with multi-line source, the option directive may appear
1532at the end of any line:
1533
1534 >>> def f(x): r'''
1535 ... >>> for x in range(10): # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1536 ... ... print x,
1537 ... 0 1 2 ... 9
1538 ...
1539 ... >>> for x in range(10):
1540 ... ... print x, # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1541 ... 0 1 2 ... 9
1542 ... '''
1543 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1544 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001545 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001546
1547If more than one line of an example with multi-line source has an
1548option directive, then they are combined:
1549
1550 >>> def f(x): r'''
1551 ... Should fail (option directive not on the last line):
1552 ... >>> for x in range(10): # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
1553 ... ... print x, # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1554 ... 0 1 2...9
1555 ... '''
1556 >>> test = doctest.DocTestFinder().find(f)[0]
1557 >>> doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False).run(test)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001558 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Edward Loper74bca7a2004-08-12 02:27:44 +00001559
1560It is an error to have a comment of the form ``# doctest:`` that is
1561*not* followed by words of the form ``+OPTION`` or ``-OPTION``, where
1562``OPTION`` is an option that has been registered with
1563`register_option`:
1564
1565 >>> # Error: Option not registered
1566 >>> s = '>>> print 12 #doctest: +BADOPTION'
1567 >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
1568 Traceback (most recent call last):
1569 ValueError: line 1 of the doctest for s has an invalid option: '+BADOPTION'
1570
1571 >>> # Error: No + or - prefix
1572 >>> s = '>>> print 12 #doctest: ELLIPSIS'
1573 >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
1574 Traceback (most recent call last):
1575 ValueError: line 1 of the doctest for s has an invalid option: 'ELLIPSIS'
1576
1577It is an error to use an option directive on a line that contains no
1578source:
1579
1580 >>> s = '>>> # doctest: +ELLIPSIS'
1581 >>> test = doctest.DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, {}, 's', 's.py', 0)
1582 Traceback (most recent call last):
1583 ValueError: line 0 of the doctest for s has an option directive on a line with no example: '# doctest: +ELLIPSIS'
Georg Brandl1f05e2e2010-08-01 08:22:05 +00001584
1585 """
1586
1587 def test_unicode_output(self): r"""
1588
1589Check that unicode output works:
1590
1591 >>> u'\xe9'
1592 u'\xe9'
1593
1594If we return unicode, SpoofOut's buf variable becomes automagically
1595converted to unicode. This means all subsequent output becomes converted
1596to unicode, and if the output contains non-ascii characters that failed.
1597It used to be that this state change carried on between tests, meaning
1598tests would fail if unicode has been output previously in the testrun.
1599This test tests that this is no longer so:
1600
1601 >>> print u'abc'
1602 abc
1603
1604And then return a string with non-ascii characters:
1605
1606 >>> print u'\xe9'.encode('utf-8')
1607 é
1608
1609 """
1610
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001611
1612def test_testsource(): r"""
1613Unit tests for `testsource()`.
1614
1615The testsource() function takes a module and a name, finds the (first)
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001616test with that name in that module, and converts it to a script. The
1617example code is converted to regular Python code. The surrounding
1618words and expected output are converted to comments:
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001619
1620 >>> import test.test_doctest
1621 >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.sample_func'
1622 >>> print doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name)
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001623 # Blah blah
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001624 #
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001625 print sample_func(22)
1626 # Expected:
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001627 ## 44
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001628 #
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001629 # Yee ha!
Georg Brandlecf93c72005-06-26 23:09:51 +00001630 <BLANKLINE>
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001631
1632 >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.SampleNewStyleClass'
1633 >>> print doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name)
1634 print '1\n2\n3'
1635 # Expected:
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001636 ## 1
1637 ## 2
1638 ## 3
Georg Brandlecf93c72005-06-26 23:09:51 +00001639 <BLANKLINE>
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001640
1641 >>> name = 'test.test_doctest.SampleClass.a_classmethod'
1642 >>> print doctest.testsource(test.test_doctest, name)
1643 print SampleClass.a_classmethod(10)
1644 # Expected:
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001645 ## 12
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001646 print SampleClass(0).a_classmethod(10)
1647 # Expected:
Edward Lopera5db6002004-08-12 02:41:30 +00001648 ## 12
Georg Brandlecf93c72005-06-26 23:09:51 +00001649 <BLANKLINE>
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001650"""
1651
1652def test_debug(): r"""
1653
1654Create a docstring that we want to debug:
1655
1656 >>> s = '''
1657 ... >>> x = 12
1658 ... >>> print x
1659 ... 12
1660 ... '''
1661
1662Create some fake stdin input, to feed to the debugger:
1663
1664 >>> import tempfile
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001665 >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001666 >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput(['next', 'print x', 'continue'])
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001667
1668Run the debugger on the docstring, and then restore sys.stdin.
1669
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001670 >>> try: doctest.debug_src(s)
1671 ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001672 > <string>(1)<module>()
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001673 (Pdb) next
1674 12
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001675 --Return--
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001676 > <string>(1)<module>()->None
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001677 (Pdb) print x
1678 12
1679 (Pdb) continue
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00001680
1681"""
1682
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001683def test_pdb_set_trace():
Tim Peters50c6bdb2004-11-08 22:07:37 +00001684 """Using pdb.set_trace from a doctest.
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001685
Tim Peters413ced62004-08-09 15:43:47 +00001686 You can use pdb.set_trace from a doctest. To do so, you must
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001687 retrieve the set_trace function from the pdb module at the time
Tim Peters413ced62004-08-09 15:43:47 +00001688 you use it. The doctest module changes sys.stdout so that it can
1689 capture program output. It also temporarily replaces pdb.set_trace
1690 with a version that restores stdout. This is necessary for you to
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001691 see debugger output.
1692
1693 >>> doc = '''
1694 ... >>> x = 42
1695 ... >>> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1696 ... '''
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +00001697 >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
1698 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, {}, "foo", "foo.py", 0)
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001699 >>> runner = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
1700
1701 To demonstrate this, we'll create a fake standard input that
1702 captures our debugger input:
1703
1704 >>> import tempfile
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001705 >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
1706 >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001707 ... 'print x', # print data defined by the example
1708 ... 'continue', # stop debugging
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001709 ... ''])
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001710
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001711 >>> try: runner.run(test)
1712 ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001713 --Return--
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001714 > <doctest foo[1]>(1)<module>()->None
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001715 -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1716 (Pdb) print x
1717 42
1718 (Pdb) continue
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001719 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001720
1721 You can also put pdb.set_trace in a function called from a test:
1722
1723 >>> def calls_set_trace():
1724 ... y=2
1725 ... import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1726
1727 >>> doc = '''
1728 ... >>> x=1
1729 ... >>> calls_set_trace()
1730 ... '''
Edward Lopera1ef6112004-08-09 16:14:41 +00001731 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo", "foo.py", 0)
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001732 >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
1733 >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001734 ... 'print y', # print data defined in the function
1735 ... 'up', # out of function
1736 ... 'print x', # print data defined by the example
1737 ... 'continue', # stop debugging
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001738 ... ''])
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001739
Tim Peters50c6bdb2004-11-08 22:07:37 +00001740 >>> try:
1741 ... runner.run(test)
1742 ... finally:
1743 ... sys.stdin = real_stdin
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001744 --Return--
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001745 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace[8]>(3)calls_set_trace()->None
1746 -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1747 (Pdb) print y
1748 2
1749 (Pdb) up
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001750 > <doctest foo[1]>(1)<module>()
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001751 -> calls_set_trace()
1752 (Pdb) print x
1753 1
1754 (Pdb) continue
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001755 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001756
1757 During interactive debugging, source code is shown, even for
1758 doctest examples:
1759
1760 >>> doc = '''
1761 ... >>> def f(x):
1762 ... ... g(x*2)
1763 ... >>> def g(x):
1764 ... ... print x+3
1765 ... ... import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1766 ... >>> f(3)
1767 ... '''
1768 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo", "foo.py", 0)
1769 >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
1770 >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
1771 ... 'list', # list source from example 2
1772 ... 'next', # return from g()
1773 ... 'list', # list source from example 1
1774 ... 'next', # return from f()
1775 ... 'list', # list source from example 3
1776 ... 'continue', # stop debugging
1777 ... ''])
1778 >>> try: runner.run(test)
1779 ... finally: sys.stdin = real_stdin
1780 ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1781 --Return--
1782 > <doctest foo[1]>(3)g()->None
1783 -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1784 (Pdb) list
1785 1 def g(x):
1786 2 print x+3
1787 3 -> import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1788 [EOF]
1789 (Pdb) next
1790 --Return--
1791 > <doctest foo[0]>(2)f()->None
1792 -> g(x*2)
1793 (Pdb) list
1794 1 def f(x):
1795 2 -> g(x*2)
1796 [EOF]
1797 (Pdb) next
1798 --Return--
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001799 > <doctest foo[2]>(1)<module>()->None
Edward Loper2de91ba2004-08-27 02:07:46 +00001800 -> f(3)
1801 (Pdb) list
1802 1 -> f(3)
1803 [EOF]
1804 (Pdb) continue
1805 **********************************************************************
1806 File "foo.py", line 7, in foo
1807 Failed example:
1808 f(3)
1809 Expected nothing
1810 Got:
1811 9
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001812 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=3)
Jim Fulton356fd192004-08-09 11:34:47 +00001813 """
1814
Tim Peters50c6bdb2004-11-08 22:07:37 +00001815def test_pdb_set_trace_nested():
1816 """This illustrates more-demanding use of set_trace with nested functions.
1817
1818 >>> class C(object):
1819 ... def calls_set_trace(self):
1820 ... y = 1
1821 ... import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
1822 ... self.f1()
1823 ... y = 2
1824 ... def f1(self):
1825 ... x = 1
1826 ... self.f2()
1827 ... x = 2
1828 ... def f2(self):
1829 ... z = 1
1830 ... z = 2
1831
1832 >>> calls_set_trace = C().calls_set_trace
1833
1834 >>> doc = '''
1835 ... >>> a = 1
1836 ... >>> calls_set_trace()
1837 ... '''
1838 >>> parser = doctest.DocTestParser()
1839 >>> runner = doctest.DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
1840 >>> test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globals(), "foo", "foo.py", 0)
1841 >>> real_stdin = sys.stdin
1842 >>> sys.stdin = _FakeInput([
1843 ... 'print y', # print data defined in the function
1844 ... 'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'step', 'print z',
1845 ... 'up', 'print x',
1846 ... 'up', 'print y',
1847 ... 'up', 'print foo',
1848 ... 'continue', # stop debugging
1849 ... ''])
1850
1851 >>> try:
1852 ... runner.run(test)
1853 ... finally:
1854 ... sys.stdin = real_stdin
1855 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(5)calls_set_trace()
1856 -> self.f1()
1857 (Pdb) print y
1858 1
1859 (Pdb) step
1860 --Call--
1861 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(7)f1()
1862 -> def f1(self):
1863 (Pdb) step
1864 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(8)f1()
1865 -> x = 1
1866 (Pdb) step
1867 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(9)f1()
1868 -> self.f2()
1869 (Pdb) step
1870 --Call--
1871 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(11)f2()
1872 -> def f2(self):
1873 (Pdb) step
1874 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(12)f2()
1875 -> z = 1
1876 (Pdb) step
1877 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(13)f2()
1878 -> z = 2
1879 (Pdb) print z
1880 1
1881 (Pdb) up
1882 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(9)f1()
1883 -> self.f2()
1884 (Pdb) print x
1885 1
1886 (Pdb) up
1887 > <doctest test.test_doctest.test_pdb_set_trace_nested[0]>(5)calls_set_trace()
1888 -> self.f1()
1889 (Pdb) print y
1890 1
1891 (Pdb) up
Jeremy Hylton3e0055f2005-10-20 19:59:25 +00001892 > <doctest foo[1]>(1)<module>()
Tim Peters50c6bdb2004-11-08 22:07:37 +00001893 -> calls_set_trace()
1894 (Pdb) print foo
1895 *** NameError: name 'foo' is not defined
1896 (Pdb) continue
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00001897 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Tim Peters50c6bdb2004-11-08 22:07:37 +00001898"""
1899
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001900def test_DocTestSuite():
Tim Peters1e277ee2004-08-07 05:37:52 +00001901 """DocTestSuite creates a unittest test suite from a doctest.
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001902
1903 We create a Suite by providing a module. A module can be provided
1904 by passing a module object:
1905
1906 >>> import unittest
1907 >>> import test.sample_doctest
1908 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite(test.sample_doctest)
1909 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001910 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001911
1912 We can also supply the module by name:
1913
1914 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest')
1915 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001916 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001917
1918 We can use the current module:
1919
1920 >>> suite = test.sample_doctest.test_suite()
1921 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001922 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=4>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001923
1924 We can supply global variables. If we pass globs, they will be
1925 used instead of the module globals. Here we'll pass an empty
1926 globals, triggering an extra error:
1927
1928 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', globs={})
1929 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001930 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=5>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001931
1932 Alternatively, we can provide extra globals. Here we'll make an
1933 error go away by providing an extra global variable:
1934
1935 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest',
1936 ... extraglobs={'y': 1})
1937 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001938 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001939
1940 You can pass option flags. Here we'll cause an extra error
1941 by disabling the blank-line feature:
1942
1943 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest',
Tim Peters1e277ee2004-08-07 05:37:52 +00001944 ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE)
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001945 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001946 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=5>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001947
Tim Peters1e277ee2004-08-07 05:37:52 +00001948 You can supply setUp and tearDown functions:
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001949
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00001950 >>> def setUp(t):
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001951 ... import test.test_doctest
1952 ... test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True
1953
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00001954 >>> def tearDown(t):
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001955 ... import test.test_doctest
1956 ... del test.test_doctest.sillySetup
1957
1958 Here, we installed a silly variable that the test expects:
1959
1960 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest',
1961 ... setUp=setUp, tearDown=tearDown)
1962 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001963 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001964
1965 But the tearDown restores sanity:
1966
1967 >>> import test.test_doctest
1968 >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup
1969 Traceback (most recent call last):
1970 ...
1971 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'sillySetup'
1972
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00001973 The setUp and tearDown funtions are passed test objects. Here
1974 we'll use the setUp function to supply the missing variable y:
1975
1976 >>> def setUp(test):
1977 ... test.globs['y'] = 1
1978
1979 >>> suite = doctest.DocTestSuite('test.sample_doctest', setUp=setUp)
1980 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00001981 <unittest.result.TestResult run=9 errors=0 failures=3>
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00001982
1983 Here, we didn't need to use a tearDown function because we
1984 modified the test globals, which are a copy of the
1985 sample_doctest module dictionary. The test globals are
1986 automatically cleared for us after a test.
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001987 """
1988
1989def test_DocFileSuite():
1990 """We can test tests found in text files using a DocFileSuite.
1991
1992 We create a suite by providing the names of one or more text
1993 files that include examples:
1994
1995 >>> import unittest
1996 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00001997 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
1998 ... 'test_doctest4.txt')
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00001999 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002000 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=3>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002001
2002 The test files are looked for in the directory containing the
2003 calling module. A package keyword argument can be provided to
2004 specify a different relative location.
2005
2006 >>> import unittest
2007 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2008 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002009 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002010 ... package='test')
2011 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002012 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=3>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002013
Brett Cannon43e53f82007-11-21 00:47:36 +00002014 Support for using a package's __loader__.get_data() is also
2015 provided.
2016
2017 >>> import unittest, pkgutil, test
Brett Cannoneaa2c982007-11-23 00:06:51 +00002018 >>> added_loader = False
Brett Cannon43e53f82007-11-21 00:47:36 +00002019 >>> if not hasattr(test, '__loader__'):
2020 ... test.__loader__ = pkgutil.get_loader(test)
2021 ... added_loader = True
2022 >>> try:
2023 ... suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2024 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
2025 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
2026 ... package='test')
2027 ... suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
2028 ... finally:
Brett Cannon9db1d5a2007-11-21 00:58:03 +00002029 ... if added_loader:
2030 ... del test.__loader__
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002031 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=3>
Brett Cannon43e53f82007-11-21 00:47:36 +00002032
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002033 '/' should be used as a path separator. It will be converted
2034 to a native separator at run time:
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002035
2036 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('../test/test_doctest.txt')
2037 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002038 <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=1>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002039
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002040 If DocFileSuite is used from an interactive session, then files
2041 are resolved relative to the directory of sys.argv[0]:
2042
Christian Heimesc756d002007-11-27 21:34:01 +00002043 >>> import types, os.path, test.test_doctest
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002044 >>> save_argv = sys.argv
2045 >>> sys.argv = [test.test_doctest.__file__]
2046 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
Christian Heimesc756d002007-11-27 21:34:01 +00002047 ... package=types.ModuleType('__main__'))
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002048 >>> sys.argv = save_argv
2049
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002050 By setting `module_relative=False`, os-specific paths may be
2051 used (including absolute paths and paths relative to the
2052 working directory):
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002053
2054 >>> # Get the absolute path of the test package.
2055 >>> test_doctest_path = os.path.abspath(test.test_doctest.__file__)
2056 >>> test_pkg_path = os.path.split(test_doctest_path)[0]
2057
2058 >>> # Use it to find the absolute path of test_doctest.txt.
2059 >>> test_file = os.path.join(test_pkg_path, 'test_doctest.txt')
2060
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002061 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite(test_file, module_relative=False)
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002062 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002063 <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=1>
Edward Loper0273f5b2004-09-18 20:27:04 +00002064
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002065 It is an error to specify `package` when `module_relative=False`:
2066
2067 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite(test_file, module_relative=False,
2068 ... package='test')
2069 Traceback (most recent call last):
2070 ValueError: Package may only be specified for module-relative paths.
2071
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002072 You can specify initial global variables:
2073
2074 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2075 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002076 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002077 ... globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'})
2078 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002079 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002080
2081 In this case, we supplied a missing favorite color. You can
2082 provide doctest options:
2083
2084 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2085 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002086 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002087 ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE,
2088 ... globs={'favorite_color': 'blue'})
2089 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002090 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=3>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002091
2092 And, you can provide setUp and tearDown functions:
2093
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002094 >>> def setUp(t):
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002095 ... import test.test_doctest
2096 ... test.test_doctest.sillySetup = True
2097
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002098 >>> def tearDown(t):
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002099 ... import test.test_doctest
2100 ... del test.test_doctest.sillySetup
2101
2102 Here, we installed a silly variable that the test expects:
2103
2104 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2105 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002106 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002107 ... setUp=setUp, tearDown=tearDown)
2108 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002109 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002110
2111 But the tearDown restores sanity:
2112
2113 >>> import test.test_doctest
2114 >>> test.test_doctest.sillySetup
2115 Traceback (most recent call last):
2116 ...
2117 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'sillySetup'
2118
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002119 The setUp and tearDown funtions are passed test objects.
2120 Here, we'll use a setUp function to set the favorite color in
2121 test_doctest.txt:
2122
2123 >>> def setUp(test):
2124 ... test.globs['favorite_color'] = 'blue'
2125
2126 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt', setUp=setUp)
2127 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002128 <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=0>
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002129
2130 Here, we didn't need to use a tearDown function because we
2131 modified the test globals. The test globals are
2132 automatically cleared for us after a test.
Tim Petersdf7a2082004-08-29 00:38:17 +00002133
Fred Drake7c404a42004-12-21 23:46:34 +00002134 Tests in a file run using `DocFileSuite` can also access the
2135 `__file__` global, which is set to the name of the file
2136 containing the tests:
2137
2138 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest3.txt')
2139 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002140 <unittest.result.TestResult run=1 errors=0 failures=0>
Fred Drake7c404a42004-12-21 23:46:34 +00002141
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002142 If the tests contain non-ASCII characters, we have to specify which
2143 encoding the file is encoded with. We do so by using the `encoding`
2144 parameter:
2145
2146 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2147 ... 'test_doctest2.txt',
2148 ... 'test_doctest4.txt',
2149 ... encoding='utf-8')
2150 >>> suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
Benjamin Petersond7b0eeb2009-07-19 20:18:21 +00002151 <unittest.result.TestResult run=3 errors=0 failures=2>
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002152
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002153 """
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002154
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00002155def test_trailing_space_in_test():
2156 """
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002157 Trailing spaces in expected output are significant:
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +00002158
Jim Fulton07a349c2004-08-22 14:10:00 +00002159 >>> x, y = 'foo', ''
2160 >>> print x, y
2161 foo \n
2162 """
Tim Peters19397e52004-08-06 22:02:59 +00002163
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002164
2165def test_unittest_reportflags():
2166 """Default unittest reporting flags can be set to control reporting
2167
2168 Here, we'll set the REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE option so we see
2169 only the first failure of each test. First, we'll look at the
2170 output without the flag. The file test_doctest.txt file has two
2171 tests. They both fail if blank lines are disabled:
2172
2173 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2174 ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE)
2175 >>> import unittest
2176 >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
2177 >>> print result.failures[0][1] # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2178 Traceback ...
2179 Failed example:
2180 favorite_color
2181 ...
2182 Failed example:
2183 if 1:
2184 ...
2185
2186 Note that we see both failures displayed.
2187
2188 >>> old = doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(
2189 ... doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE)
2190
2191 Now, when we run the test:
2192
2193 >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
2194 >>> print result.failures[0][1] # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2195 Traceback ...
2196 Failed example:
2197 favorite_color
2198 Exception raised:
2199 ...
2200 NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
2201 <BLANKLINE>
2202 <BLANKLINE>
Tim Petersdf7a2082004-08-29 00:38:17 +00002203
Jim Fultonf54bad42004-08-28 14:57:56 +00002204 We get only the first failure.
2205
2206 If we give any reporting options when we set up the tests,
2207 however:
2208
2209 >>> suite = doctest.DocFileSuite('test_doctest.txt',
2210 ... optionflags=doctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE | doctest.REPORT_NDIFF)
2211
2212 Then the default eporting options are ignored:
2213
2214 >>> result = suite.run(unittest.TestResult())
2215 >>> print result.failures[0][1] # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2216 Traceback ...
2217 Failed example:
2218 favorite_color
2219 ...
2220 Failed example:
2221 if 1:
2222 print 'a'
2223 print
2224 print 'b'
2225 Differences (ndiff with -expected +actual):
2226 a
2227 - <BLANKLINE>
2228 +
2229 b
2230 <BLANKLINE>
2231 <BLANKLINE>
2232
2233
2234 Test runners can restore the formatting flags after they run:
2235
2236 >>> ignored = doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(old)
2237
2238 """
2239
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002240def test_testfile(): r"""
2241Tests for the `testfile()` function. This function runs all the
2242doctest examples in a given file. In its simple invokation, it is
2243called with the name of a file, which is taken to be relative to the
2244calling module. The return value is (#failures, #tests).
2245
Florent Xicluna2a903b22010-02-27 13:31:23 +00002246We don't want `-v` in sys.argv for these tests.
2247
2248 >>> save_argv = sys.argv
2249 >>> if '-v' in sys.argv:
2250 ... sys.argv = [arg for arg in save_argv if arg != '-v']
2251
2252
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002253 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2254 **********************************************************************
2255 File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
2256 Failed example:
2257 favorite_color
2258 Exception raised:
2259 ...
2260 NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
2261 **********************************************************************
2262 1 items had failures:
2263 1 of 2 in test_doctest.txt
2264 ***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002265 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002266 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2267
2268(Note: we'll be clearing doctest.master after each call to
Florent Xicluna07627882010-03-21 01:14:24 +00002269`doctest.testfile`, to suppress warnings about multiple tests with the
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002270same name.)
2271
2272Globals may be specified with the `globs` and `extraglobs` parameters:
2273
2274 >>> globs = {'favorite_color': 'blue'}
2275 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002276 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002277 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2278
2279 >>> extraglobs = {'favorite_color': 'red'}
2280 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs,
2281 ... extraglobs=extraglobs) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2282 **********************************************************************
2283 File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
2284 Failed example:
2285 favorite_color
2286 Expected:
2287 'blue'
2288 Got:
2289 'red'
2290 **********************************************************************
2291 1 items had failures:
2292 1 of 2 in test_doctest.txt
2293 ***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002294 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002295 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2296
2297The file may be made relative to a given module or package, using the
2298optional `module_relative` parameter:
2299
2300 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs,
2301 ... module_relative='test')
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002302 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002303 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2304
2305Verbosity can be increased with the optional `verbose` paremter:
2306
2307 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', globs=globs, verbose=True)
2308 Trying:
2309 favorite_color
2310 Expecting:
2311 'blue'
2312 ok
2313 Trying:
2314 if 1:
2315 print 'a'
2316 print
2317 print 'b'
2318 Expecting:
2319 a
2320 <BLANKLINE>
2321 b
2322 ok
2323 1 items passed all tests:
2324 2 tests in test_doctest.txt
2325 2 tests in 1 items.
2326 2 passed and 0 failed.
2327 Test passed.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002328 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002329 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2330
2331The name of the test may be specified with the optional `name`
2332parameter:
2333
2334 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', name='newname')
2335 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2336 **********************************************************************
2337 File "...", line 6, in newname
2338 ...
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002339 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002340 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2341
2342The summary report may be supressed with the optional `report`
2343parameter:
2344
2345 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', report=False)
2346 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2347 **********************************************************************
2348 File "...", line 6, in test_doctest.txt
2349 Failed example:
2350 favorite_color
2351 Exception raised:
2352 ...
2353 NameError: name 'favorite_color' is not defined
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002354 TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002355 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2356
2357The optional keyword argument `raise_on_error` can be used to raise an
2358exception on the first error (which may be useful for postmortem
2359debugging):
2360
2361 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest.txt', raise_on_error=True)
2362 ... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2363 Traceback (most recent call last):
2364 UnexpectedException: ...
2365 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002366
2367If the tests contain non-ASCII characters, the tests might fail, since
2368it's unknown which encoding is used. The encoding can be specified
2369using the optional keyword argument `encoding`:
2370
2371 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2372 **********************************************************************
2373 File "...", line 7, in test_doctest4.txt
2374 Failed example:
2375 u'...'
2376 Expected:
2377 u'f\xf6\xf6'
2378 Got:
2379 u'f\xc3\xb6\xc3\xb6'
2380 **********************************************************************
2381 ...
2382 **********************************************************************
2383 1 items had failures:
2384 2 of 4 in test_doctest4.txt
2385 ***Test Failed*** 2 failures.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002386 TestResults(failed=2, attempted=4)
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002387 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2388
2389 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt', encoding='utf-8')
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002390 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=4)
George Yoshidaf3c65de2006-05-28 16:39:09 +00002391 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
Florent Xicluna2a903b22010-02-27 13:31:23 +00002392
2393Switch the module encoding to 'utf-8' to test the verbose output without
2394bothering with the current sys.stdout encoding.
2395
2396 >>> doctest._encoding, saved_encoding = 'utf-8', doctest._encoding
2397 >>> doctest.testfile('test_doctest4.txt', encoding='utf-8', verbose=True)
2398 Trying:
2399 u'föö'
2400 Expecting:
2401 u'f\xf6\xf6'
2402 ok
2403 Trying:
2404 u'bÄ…r'
2405 Expecting:
2406 u'b\u0105r'
2407 ok
2408 Trying:
2409 'föö'
2410 Expecting:
2411 'f\xc3\xb6\xc3\xb6'
2412 ok
2413 Trying:
2414 'bÄ…r'
2415 Expecting:
2416 'b\xc4\x85r'
2417 ok
2418 1 items passed all tests:
2419 4 tests in test_doctest4.txt
2420 4 tests in 1 items.
2421 4 passed and 0 failed.
2422 Test passed.
2423 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=4)
2424 >>> doctest._encoding = saved_encoding
2425 >>> doctest.master = None # Reset master.
2426 >>> sys.argv = save_argv
Edward Loper052d0cd2004-09-19 17:19:33 +00002427"""
2428
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002429# old_test1, ... used to live in doctest.py, but cluttered it. Note
2430# that these use the deprecated doctest.Tester, so should go away (or
2431# be rewritten) someday.
2432
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002433def old_test1(): r"""
2434>>> from doctest import Tester
2435>>> t = Tester(globs={'x': 42}, verbose=0)
2436>>> t.runstring(r'''
2437... >>> x = x * 2
2438... >>> print x
2439... 42
2440... ''', 'XYZ')
2441**********************************************************************
2442Line 3, in XYZ
2443Failed example:
2444 print x
2445Expected:
2446 42
2447Got:
2448 84
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002449TestResults(failed=1, attempted=2)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002450>>> t.runstring(">>> x = x * 2\n>>> print x\n84\n", 'example2')
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002451TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002452>>> t.summarize()
2453**********************************************************************
24541 items had failures:
2455 1 of 2 in XYZ
2456***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002457TestResults(failed=1, attempted=4)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002458>>> t.summarize(verbose=1)
24591 items passed all tests:
2460 2 tests in example2
2461**********************************************************************
24621 items had failures:
2463 1 of 2 in XYZ
24644 tests in 2 items.
24653 passed and 1 failed.
2466***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002467TestResults(failed=1, attempted=4)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002468"""
2469
2470def old_test2(): r"""
2471 >>> from doctest import Tester
2472 >>> t = Tester(globs={}, verbose=1)
2473 >>> test = r'''
2474 ... # just an example
2475 ... >>> x = 1 + 2
2476 ... >>> x
2477 ... 3
2478 ... '''
2479 >>> t.runstring(test, "Example")
2480 Running string Example
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +00002481 Trying:
2482 x = 1 + 2
2483 Expecting nothing
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002484 ok
Edward Loperaacf0832004-08-26 01:19:50 +00002485 Trying:
2486 x
2487 Expecting:
2488 3
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002489 ok
2490 0 of 2 examples failed in string Example
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002491 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002492"""
2493
2494def old_test3(): r"""
2495 >>> from doctest import Tester
2496 >>> t = Tester(globs={}, verbose=0)
2497 >>> def _f():
2498 ... '''Trivial docstring example.
2499 ... >>> assert 2 == 2
2500 ... '''
2501 ... return 32
2502 ...
2503 >>> t.rundoc(_f) # expect 0 failures in 1 example
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002504 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002505"""
2506
2507def old_test4(): """
Christian Heimesc756d002007-11-27 21:34:01 +00002508 >>> import types
2509 >>> m1 = types.ModuleType('_m1')
2510 >>> m2 = types.ModuleType('_m2')
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002511 >>> test_data = \"""
2512 ... def _f():
2513 ... '''>>> assert 1 == 1
2514 ... '''
2515 ... def g():
2516 ... '''>>> assert 2 != 1
2517 ... '''
2518 ... class H:
2519 ... '''>>> assert 2 > 1
2520 ... '''
2521 ... def bar(self):
2522 ... '''>>> assert 1 < 2
2523 ... '''
2524 ... \"""
2525 >>> exec test_data in m1.__dict__
2526 >>> exec test_data in m2.__dict__
2527 >>> m1.__dict__.update({"f2": m2._f, "g2": m2.g, "h2": m2.H})
2528
2529 Tests that objects outside m1 are excluded:
2530
2531 >>> from doctest import Tester
2532 >>> t = Tester(globs={}, verbose=0)
2533 >>> t.rundict(m1.__dict__, "rundict_test", m1) # f2 and g2 and h2 skipped
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002534 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=4)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002535
2536 Once more, not excluding stuff outside m1:
2537
2538 >>> t = Tester(globs={}, verbose=0)
2539 >>> t.rundict(m1.__dict__, "rundict_test_pvt") # None are skipped.
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002540 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=8)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002541
2542 The exclusion of objects from outside the designated module is
2543 meant to be invoked automagically by testmod.
2544
2545 >>> doctest.testmod(m1, verbose=False)
Raymond Hettingerfff4e6e2008-01-11 01:25:54 +00002546 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=4)
Tim Petersa7def722004-08-23 22:13:22 +00002547"""
2548
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002549######################################################################
2550## Main
2551######################################################################
2552
2553def test_main():
2554 # Check the doctest cases in doctest itself:
2555 test_support.run_doctest(doctest, verbosity=True)
Florent Xicluna07627882010-03-21 01:14:24 +00002556
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002557 from test import test_doctest
Florent Xicluna6257a7b2010-03-31 22:01:03 +00002558
2559 # Ignore all warnings about the use of class Tester in this module.
2560 deprecations = [("class Tester is deprecated", DeprecationWarning)]
2561 if sys.py3kwarning:
2562 deprecations += [("backquote not supported", SyntaxWarning),
2563 ("execfile.. not supported", DeprecationWarning)]
2564 with test_support.check_warnings(*deprecations):
Florent Xicluna07627882010-03-21 01:14:24 +00002565 # Check the doctest cases defined here:
2566 test_support.run_doctest(test_doctest, verbosity=True)
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002567
Victor Stinneredb9f872010-04-27 21:51:26 +00002568import sys
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002569def test_coverage(coverdir):
Victor Stinneredb9f872010-04-27 21:51:26 +00002570 trace = test_support.import_module('trace')
Tim Peters8485b562004-08-04 18:46:34 +00002571 tracer = trace.Trace(ignoredirs=[sys.prefix, sys.exec_prefix,],
2572 trace=0, count=1)
2573 tracer.run('reload(doctest); test_main()')
2574 r = tracer.results()
2575 print 'Writing coverage results...'
2576 r.write_results(show_missing=True, summary=True,
2577 coverdir=coverdir)
2578
2579if __name__ == '__main__':
2580 if '-c' in sys.argv:
2581 test_coverage('/tmp/doctest.cover')
2582 else:
2583 test_main()