| # |
| # Test suite for the textwrap module. |
| # |
| # Original tests written by Greg Ward <gward@python.net>. |
| # Converted to PyUnit by Peter Hansen <peter@engcorp.com>. |
| # Currently maintained by Greg Ward. |
| # |
| # $Id$ |
| # |
| |
| import unittest |
| |
| from textwrap import TextWrapper, wrap, fill, dedent, indent, shorten |
| |
| |
| class BaseTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
| '''Parent class with utility methods for textwrap tests.''' |
| |
| def show(self, textin): |
| if isinstance(textin, list): |
| result = [] |
| for i in range(len(textin)): |
| result.append(" %d: %r" % (i, textin[i])) |
| result = "\n".join(result) if result else " no lines" |
| elif isinstance(textin, str): |
| result = " %s\n" % repr(textin) |
| return result |
| |
| |
| def check(self, result, expect): |
| self.assertEqual(result, expect, |
| 'expected:\n%s\nbut got:\n%s' % ( |
| self.show(expect), self.show(result))) |
| |
| def check_wrap(self, text, width, expect, **kwargs): |
| result = wrap(text, width, **kwargs) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| def check_split(self, text, expect): |
| result = self.wrapper._split(text) |
| self.assertEqual(result, expect, |
| "\nexpected %r\n" |
| "but got %r" % (expect, result)) |
| |
| |
| class WrapTestCase(BaseTestCase): |
| |
| def setUp(self): |
| self.wrapper = TextWrapper(width=45) |
| |
| def test_simple(self): |
| # Simple case: just words, spaces, and a bit of punctuation |
| |
| text = "Hello there, how are you this fine day? I'm glad to hear it!" |
| |
| self.check_wrap(text, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are you", |
| "this fine", |
| "day? I'm", |
| "glad to hear", |
| "it!"]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 42, |
| ["Hello there, how are you this fine day?", |
| "I'm glad to hear it!"]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 80, [text]) |
| |
| def test_empty_string(self): |
| # Check that wrapping the empty string returns an empty list. |
| self.check_wrap("", 6, []) |
| self.check_wrap("", 6, [], drop_whitespace=False) |
| |
| def test_empty_string_with_initial_indent(self): |
| # Check that the empty string is not indented. |
| self.check_wrap("", 6, [], initial_indent="++") |
| self.check_wrap("", 6, [], initial_indent="++", drop_whitespace=False) |
| |
| def test_whitespace(self): |
| # Whitespace munging and end-of-sentence detection |
| |
| text = """\ |
| This is a paragraph that already has |
| line breaks. But some of its lines are much longer than the others, |
| so it needs to be wrapped. |
| Some lines are \ttabbed too. |
| What a mess! |
| """ |
| |
| expect = ["This is a paragraph that already has line", |
| "breaks. But some of its lines are much", |
| "longer than the others, so it needs to be", |
| "wrapped. Some lines are tabbed too. What a", |
| "mess!"] |
| |
| wrapper = TextWrapper(45, fix_sentence_endings=True) |
| result = wrapper.wrap(text) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| result = wrapper.fill(text) |
| self.check(result, '\n'.join(expect)) |
| |
| text = "\tTest\tdefault\t\ttabsize." |
| expect = [" Test default tabsize."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 80, expect) |
| |
| text = "\tTest\tcustom\t\ttabsize." |
| expect = [" Test custom tabsize."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 80, expect, tabsize=4) |
| |
| def test_fix_sentence_endings(self): |
| wrapper = TextWrapper(60, fix_sentence_endings=True) |
| |
| # SF #847346: ensure that fix_sentence_endings=True does the |
| # right thing even on input short enough that it doesn't need to |
| # be wrapped. |
| text = "A short line. Note the single space." |
| expect = ["A short line. Note the single space."] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| # Test some of the hairy end cases that _fix_sentence_endings() |
| # is supposed to handle (the easy stuff is tested in |
| # test_whitespace() above). |
| text = "Well, Doctor? What do you think?" |
| expect = ["Well, Doctor? What do you think?"] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| text = "Well, Doctor?\nWhat do you think?" |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| text = 'I say, chaps! Anyone for "tennis?"\nHmmph!' |
| expect = ['I say, chaps! Anyone for "tennis?" Hmmph!'] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| wrapper.width = 20 |
| expect = ['I say, chaps!', 'Anyone for "tennis?"', 'Hmmph!'] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| text = 'And she said, "Go to hell!"\nCan you believe that?' |
| expect = ['And she said, "Go to', |
| 'hell!" Can you', |
| 'believe that?'] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| wrapper.width = 60 |
| expect = ['And she said, "Go to hell!" Can you believe that?'] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| text = 'File stdio.h is nice.' |
| expect = ['File stdio.h is nice.'] |
| self.check(wrapper.wrap(text), expect) |
| |
| def test_wrap_short(self): |
| # Wrapping to make short lines longer |
| |
| text = "This is a\nshort paragraph." |
| |
| self.check_wrap(text, 20, ["This is a short", |
| "paragraph."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 40, ["This is a short paragraph."]) |
| |
| |
| def test_wrap_short_1line(self): |
| # Test endcases |
| |
| text = "This is a short line." |
| |
| self.check_wrap(text, 30, ["This is a short line."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 30, ["(1) This is a short line."], |
| initial_indent="(1) ") |
| |
| |
| def test_hyphenated(self): |
| # Test breaking hyphenated words |
| |
| text = ("this-is-a-useful-feature-for-" |
| "reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly") |
| |
| self.check_wrap(text, 40, |
| ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-", |
| "reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 41, |
| ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-", |
| "reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 42, |
| ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-reformatting-", |
| "posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) |
| # The test tests current behavior but is not testing parts of the API. |
| expect = ("this-|is-|a-|useful-|feature-|for-|" |
| "reformatting-|posts-|from-|tim-|peters'ly").split('|') |
| self.check_wrap(text, 1, expect, break_long_words=False) |
| self.check_split(text, expect) |
| |
| self.check_split('e-mail', ['e-mail']) |
| self.check_split('Jelly-O', ['Jelly-O']) |
| # The test tests current behavior but is not testing parts of the API. |
| self.check_split('half-a-crown', 'half-|a-|crown'.split('|')) |
| |
| def test_hyphenated_numbers(self): |
| # Test that hyphenated numbers (eg. dates) are not broken like words. |
| text = ("Python 1.0.0 was released on 1994-01-26. Python 1.0.1 was\n" |
| "released on 1994-02-15.") |
| |
| self.check_wrap(text, 30, ['Python 1.0.0 was released on', |
| '1994-01-26. Python 1.0.1 was', |
| 'released on 1994-02-15.']) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 40, ['Python 1.0.0 was released on 1994-01-26.', |
| 'Python 1.0.1 was released on 1994-02-15.']) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 1, text.split(), break_long_words=False) |
| |
| text = "I do all my shopping at 7-11." |
| self.check_wrap(text, 25, ["I do all my shopping at", |
| "7-11."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 27, ["I do all my shopping at", |
| "7-11."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 29, ["I do all my shopping at 7-11."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 1, text.split(), break_long_words=False) |
| |
| def test_em_dash(self): |
| # Test text with em-dashes |
| text = "Em-dashes should be written -- thus." |
| self.check_wrap(text, 25, |
| ["Em-dashes should be", |
| "written -- thus."]) |
| |
| # Probe the boundaries of the properly written em-dash, |
| # ie. " -- ". |
| self.check_wrap(text, 29, |
| ["Em-dashes should be written", |
| "-- thus."]) |
| expect = ["Em-dashes should be written --", |
| "thus."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 30, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 35, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 36, |
| ["Em-dashes should be written -- thus."]) |
| |
| # The improperly written em-dash is handled too, because |
| # it's adjacent to non-whitespace on both sides. |
| text = "You can also do--this or even---this." |
| expect = ["You can also do", |
| "--this or even", |
| "---this."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 15, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 16, expect) |
| expect = ["You can also do--", |
| "this or even---", |
| "this."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 17, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 19, expect) |
| expect = ["You can also do--this or even", |
| "---this."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 29, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 31, expect) |
| expect = ["You can also do--this or even---", |
| "this."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 32, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 35, expect) |
| |
| # All of the above behaviour could be deduced by probing the |
| # _split() method. |
| text = "Here's an -- em-dash and--here's another---and another!" |
| expect = ["Here's", " ", "an", " ", "--", " ", "em-", "dash", " ", |
| "and", "--", "here's", " ", "another", "---", |
| "and", " ", "another!"] |
| self.check_split(text, expect) |
| |
| text = "and then--bam!--he was gone" |
| expect = ["and", " ", "then", "--", "bam!", "--", |
| "he", " ", "was", " ", "gone"] |
| self.check_split(text, expect) |
| |
| |
| def test_unix_options (self): |
| # Test that Unix-style command-line options are wrapped correctly. |
| # Both Optik (OptionParser) and Docutils rely on this behaviour! |
| |
| text = "You should use the -n option, or --dry-run in its long form." |
| self.check_wrap(text, 20, |
| ["You should use the", |
| "-n option, or --dry-", |
| "run in its long", |
| "form."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 21, |
| ["You should use the -n", |
| "option, or --dry-run", |
| "in its long form."]) |
| expect = ["You should use the -n option, or", |
| "--dry-run in its long form."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 32, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 34, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 35, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 38, expect) |
| expect = ["You should use the -n option, or --dry-", |
| "run in its long form."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 39, expect) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 41, expect) |
| expect = ["You should use the -n option, or --dry-run", |
| "in its long form."] |
| self.check_wrap(text, 42, expect) |
| |
| # Again, all of the above can be deduced from _split(). |
| text = "the -n option, or --dry-run or --dryrun" |
| expect = ["the", " ", "-n", " ", "option,", " ", "or", " ", |
| "--dry-", "run", " ", "or", " ", "--dryrun"] |
| self.check_split(text, expect) |
| |
| def test_funky_hyphens (self): |
| # Screwy edge cases cooked up by David Goodger. All reported |
| # in SF bug #596434. |
| self.check_split("what the--hey!", ["what", " ", "the", "--", "hey!"]) |
| self.check_split("what the--", ["what", " ", "the--"]) |
| self.check_split("what the--.", ["what", " ", "the--."]) |
| self.check_split("--text--.", ["--text--."]) |
| |
| # When I first read bug #596434, this is what I thought David |
| # was talking about. I was wrong; these have always worked |
| # fine. The real problem is tested in test_funky_parens() |
| # below... |
| self.check_split("--option", ["--option"]) |
| self.check_split("--option-opt", ["--option-", "opt"]) |
| self.check_split("foo --option-opt bar", |
| ["foo", " ", "--option-", "opt", " ", "bar"]) |
| |
| def test_punct_hyphens(self): |
| # Oh bother, SF #965425 found another problem with hyphens -- |
| # hyphenated words in single quotes weren't handled correctly. |
| # In fact, the bug is that *any* punctuation around a hyphenated |
| # word was handled incorrectly, except for a leading "--", which |
| # was special-cased for Optik and Docutils. So test a variety |
| # of styles of punctuation around a hyphenated word. |
| # (Actually this is based on an Optik bug report, #813077). |
| self.check_split("the 'wibble-wobble' widget", |
| ['the', ' ', "'wibble-", "wobble'", ' ', 'widget']) |
| self.check_split('the "wibble-wobble" widget', |
| ['the', ' ', '"wibble-', 'wobble"', ' ', 'widget']) |
| self.check_split("the (wibble-wobble) widget", |
| ['the', ' ', "(wibble-", "wobble)", ' ', 'widget']) |
| self.check_split("the ['wibble-wobble'] widget", |
| ['the', ' ', "['wibble-", "wobble']", ' ', 'widget']) |
| |
| # The test tests current behavior but is not testing parts of the API. |
| self.check_split("what-d'you-call-it.", |
| "what-d'you-|call-|it.".split('|')) |
| |
| def test_funky_parens (self): |
| # Second part of SF bug #596434: long option strings inside |
| # parentheses. |
| self.check_split("foo (--option) bar", |
| ["foo", " ", "(--option)", " ", "bar"]) |
| |
| # Related stuff -- make sure parens work in simpler contexts. |
| self.check_split("foo (bar) baz", |
| ["foo", " ", "(bar)", " ", "baz"]) |
| self.check_split("blah (ding dong), wubba", |
| ["blah", " ", "(ding", " ", "dong),", |
| " ", "wubba"]) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_false(self): |
| # Check that drop_whitespace=False preserves whitespace. |
| # SF patch #1581073 |
| text = " This is a sentence with much whitespace." |
| self.check_wrap(text, 10, |
| [" This is a", " ", "sentence ", |
| "with ", "much white", "space."], |
| drop_whitespace=False) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_false_whitespace_only(self): |
| # Check that drop_whitespace=False preserves a whitespace-only string. |
| self.check_wrap(" ", 6, [" "], drop_whitespace=False) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_false_whitespace_only_with_indent(self): |
| # Check that a whitespace-only string gets indented (when |
| # drop_whitespace is False). |
| self.check_wrap(" ", 6, [" "], drop_whitespace=False, |
| initial_indent=" ") |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_whitespace_only(self): |
| # Check drop_whitespace on a whitespace-only string. |
| self.check_wrap(" ", 6, []) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_leading_whitespace(self): |
| # Check that drop_whitespace does not drop leading whitespace (if |
| # followed by non-whitespace). |
| # SF bug #622849 reported inconsistent handling of leading |
| # whitespace; let's test that a bit, shall we? |
| text = " This is a sentence with leading whitespace." |
| self.check_wrap(text, 50, |
| [" This is a sentence with leading whitespace."]) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 30, |
| [" This is a sentence with", "leading whitespace."]) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_whitespace_line(self): |
| # Check that drop_whitespace skips the whole line if a non-leading |
| # line consists only of whitespace. |
| text = "abcd efgh" |
| # Include the result for drop_whitespace=False for comparison. |
| self.check_wrap(text, 6, ["abcd", " ", "efgh"], |
| drop_whitespace=False) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 6, ["abcd", "efgh"]) |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_whitespace_only_with_indent(self): |
| # Check that initial_indent is not applied to a whitespace-only |
| # string. This checks a special case of the fact that dropping |
| # whitespace occurs before indenting. |
| self.check_wrap(" ", 6, [], initial_indent="++") |
| |
| def test_drop_whitespace_whitespace_indent(self): |
| # Check that drop_whitespace does not drop whitespace indents. |
| # This checks a special case of the fact that dropping whitespace |
| # occurs before indenting. |
| self.check_wrap("abcd efgh", 6, [" abcd", " efgh"], |
| initial_indent=" ", subsequent_indent=" ") |
| |
| def test_split(self): |
| # Ensure that the standard _split() method works as advertised |
| # in the comments |
| |
| text = "Hello there -- you goof-ball, use the -b option!" |
| |
| result = self.wrapper._split(text) |
| self.check(result, |
| ["Hello", " ", "there", " ", "--", " ", "you", " ", "goof-", |
| "ball,", " ", "use", " ", "the", " ", "-b", " ", "option!"]) |
| |
| def test_break_on_hyphens(self): |
| # Ensure that the break_on_hyphens attributes work |
| text = "yaba daba-doo" |
| self.check_wrap(text, 10, ["yaba daba-", "doo"], |
| break_on_hyphens=True) |
| self.check_wrap(text, 10, ["yaba", "daba-doo"], |
| break_on_hyphens=False) |
| |
| def test_bad_width(self): |
| # Ensure that width <= 0 is caught. |
| text = "Whatever, it doesn't matter." |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, wrap, text, 0) |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, wrap, text, -1) |
| |
| def test_no_split_at_umlaut(self): |
| text = "Die Empf\xe4nger-Auswahl" |
| self.check_wrap(text, 13, ["Die", "Empf\xe4nger-", "Auswahl"]) |
| |
| def test_umlaut_followed_by_dash(self): |
| text = "aa \xe4\xe4-\xe4\xe4" |
| self.check_wrap(text, 7, ["aa \xe4\xe4-", "\xe4\xe4"]) |
| |
| |
| class MaxLinesTestCase(BaseTestCase): |
| text = "Hello there, how are you this fine day? I'm glad to hear it!" |
| |
| def test_simple(self): |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello [...]"], |
| max_lines=0) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello [...]"], |
| max_lines=1) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how [...]"], |
| max_lines=2) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 13, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are [...]"], |
| max_lines=2) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 80, [self.text], max_lines=1) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are you", |
| "this fine", |
| "day? I'm", |
| "glad to hear", |
| "it!"], |
| max_lines=6) |
| |
| def test_spaces(self): |
| # strip spaces before placeholder |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are you", |
| "this fine", |
| "day? [...]"], |
| max_lines=4) |
| # placeholder at the start of line |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 6, |
| ["Hello", |
| "[...]"], |
| max_lines=2) |
| # final spaces |
| self.check_wrap(self.text + ' ' * 10, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are you", |
| "this fine", |
| "day? I'm", |
| "glad to hear", |
| "it!"], |
| max_lines=6) |
| |
| def test_placeholder(self): |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello..."], |
| max_lines=1, |
| placeholder='...') |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ["Hello there,", |
| "how are..."], |
| max_lines=2, |
| placeholder='...') |
| # long placeholder and indentation |
| with self.assertRaises(ValueError): |
| wrap(self.text, 16, initial_indent=' ', |
| max_lines=1, placeholder=' [truncated]...') |
| with self.assertRaises(ValueError): |
| wrap(self.text, 16, subsequent_indent=' ', |
| max_lines=2, placeholder=' [truncated]...') |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 16, |
| [" Hello there,", |
| " [truncated]..."], |
| max_lines=2, |
| initial_indent=' ', |
| subsequent_indent=' ', |
| placeholder=' [truncated]...') |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 16, |
| [" [truncated]..."], |
| max_lines=1, |
| initial_indent=' ', |
| subsequent_indent=' ', |
| placeholder=' [truncated]...') |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 80, [self.text], placeholder='.' * 1000) |
| |
| |
| class LongWordTestCase (BaseTestCase): |
| def setUp(self): |
| self.wrapper = TextWrapper() |
| self.text = '''\ |
| Did you say "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?" |
| How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways? |
| ''' |
| |
| def test_break_long(self): |
| # Wrap text with long words and lots of punctuation |
| |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 30, |
| ['Did you say "supercalifragilis', |
| 'ticexpialidocious?" How *do*', |
| 'you spell that odd word,', |
| 'anyways?']) |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 50, |
| ['Did you say "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?"', |
| 'How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways?']) |
| |
| # SF bug 797650. Prevent an infinite loop by making sure that at |
| # least one character gets split off on every pass. |
| self.check_wrap('-'*10+'hello', 10, |
| ['----------', |
| ' h', |
| ' e', |
| ' l', |
| ' l', |
| ' o'], |
| subsequent_indent = ' '*15) |
| |
| # bug 1146. Prevent a long word to be wrongly wrapped when the |
| # preceding word is exactly one character shorter than the width |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ['Did you say ', |
| '"supercalifr', |
| 'agilisticexp', |
| 'ialidocious?', |
| '" How *do*', |
| 'you spell', |
| 'that odd', |
| 'word,', |
| 'anyways?']) |
| |
| def test_nobreak_long(self): |
| # Test with break_long_words disabled |
| self.wrapper.break_long_words = 0 |
| self.wrapper.width = 30 |
| expect = ['Did you say', |
| '"supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?"', |
| 'How *do* you spell that odd', |
| 'word, anyways?' |
| ] |
| result = self.wrapper.wrap(self.text) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| # Same thing with kwargs passed to standalone wrap() function. |
| result = wrap(self.text, width=30, break_long_words=0) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| def test_max_lines_long(self): |
| self.check_wrap(self.text, 12, |
| ['Did you say ', |
| '"supercalifr', |
| 'agilisticexp', |
| '[...]'], |
| max_lines=4) |
| |
| |
| class IndentTestCases(BaseTestCase): |
| |
| # called before each test method |
| def setUp(self): |
| self.text = '''\ |
| This paragraph will be filled, first without any indentation, |
| and then with some (including a hanging indent).''' |
| |
| |
| def test_fill(self): |
| # Test the fill() method |
| |
| expect = '''\ |
| This paragraph will be filled, first |
| without any indentation, and then with |
| some (including a hanging indent).''' |
| |
| result = fill(self.text, 40) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| |
| def test_initial_indent(self): |
| # Test initial_indent parameter |
| |
| expect = [" This paragraph will be filled,", |
| "first without any indentation, and then", |
| "with some (including a hanging indent)."] |
| result = wrap(self.text, 40, initial_indent=" ") |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| expect = "\n".join(expect) |
| result = fill(self.text, 40, initial_indent=" ") |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| |
| def test_subsequent_indent(self): |
| # Test subsequent_indent parameter |
| |
| expect = '''\ |
| * This paragraph will be filled, first |
| without any indentation, and then |
| with some (including a hanging |
| indent).''' |
| |
| result = fill(self.text, 40, |
| initial_indent=" * ", subsequent_indent=" ") |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| |
| # Despite the similar names, DedentTestCase is *not* the inverse |
| # of IndentTestCase! |
| class DedentTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
| |
| def assertUnchanged(self, text): |
| """assert that dedent() has no effect on 'text'""" |
| self.assertEqual(text, dedent(text)) |
| |
| def test_dedent_nomargin(self): |
| # No lines indented. |
| text = "Hello there.\nHow are you?\nOh good, I'm glad." |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| # Similar, with a blank line. |
| text = "Hello there.\n\nBoo!" |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| # Some lines indented, but overall margin is still zero. |
| text = "Hello there.\n This is indented." |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| # Again, add a blank line. |
| text = "Hello there.\n\n Boo!\n" |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| def test_dedent_even(self): |
| # All lines indented by two spaces. |
| text = " Hello there.\n How are ya?\n Oh good." |
| expect = "Hello there.\nHow are ya?\nOh good." |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # Same, with blank lines. |
| text = " Hello there.\n\n How are ya?\n Oh good.\n" |
| expect = "Hello there.\n\nHow are ya?\nOh good.\n" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # Now indent one of the blank lines. |
| text = " Hello there.\n \n How are ya?\n Oh good.\n" |
| expect = "Hello there.\n\nHow are ya?\nOh good.\n" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| def test_dedent_uneven(self): |
| # Lines indented unevenly. |
| text = '''\ |
| def foo(): |
| while 1: |
| return foo |
| ''' |
| expect = '''\ |
| def foo(): |
| while 1: |
| return foo |
| ''' |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # Uneven indentation with a blank line. |
| text = " Foo\n Bar\n\n Baz\n" |
| expect = "Foo\n Bar\n\n Baz\n" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # Uneven indentation with a whitespace-only line. |
| text = " Foo\n Bar\n \n Baz\n" |
| expect = "Foo\n Bar\n\n Baz\n" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # dedent() should not mangle internal tabs |
| def test_dedent_preserve_internal_tabs(self): |
| text = " hello\tthere\n how are\tyou?" |
| expect = "hello\tthere\nhow are\tyou?" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # make sure that it preserves tabs when it's not making any |
| # changes at all |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(expect)) |
| |
| # dedent() should not mangle tabs in the margin (i.e. |
| # tabs and spaces both count as margin, but are *not* |
| # considered equivalent) |
| def test_dedent_preserve_margin_tabs(self): |
| text = " hello there\n\thow are you?" |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| # same effect even if we have 8 spaces |
| text = " hello there\n\thow are you?" |
| self.assertUnchanged(text) |
| |
| # dedent() only removes whitespace that can be uniformly removed! |
| text = "\thello there\n\thow are you?" |
| expect = "hello there\nhow are you?" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| text = " \thello there\n \thow are you?" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| text = " \t hello there\n \t how are you?" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| text = " \thello there\n \t how are you?" |
| expect = "hello there\n how are you?" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| # test margin is smaller than smallest indent |
| text = " \thello there\n \thow are you?\n \tI'm fine, thanks" |
| expect = " \thello there\n \thow are you?\n\tI'm fine, thanks" |
| self.assertEqual(expect, dedent(text)) |
| |
| |
| # Test textwrap.indent |
| class IndentTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
| # The examples used for tests. If any of these change, the expected |
| # results in the various test cases must also be updated. |
| # The roundtrip cases are separate, because textwrap.dedent doesn't |
| # handle Windows line endings |
| ROUNDTRIP_CASES = ( |
| # Basic test case |
| "Hi.\nThis is a test.\nTesting.", |
| # Include a blank line |
| "Hi.\nThis is a test.\n\nTesting.", |
| # Include leading and trailing blank lines |
| "\nHi.\nThis is a test.\nTesting.\n", |
| ) |
| CASES = ROUNDTRIP_CASES + ( |
| # Use Windows line endings |
| "Hi.\r\nThis is a test.\r\nTesting.\r\n", |
| # Pathological case |
| "\nHi.\r\nThis is a test.\n\r\nTesting.\r\n\n", |
| ) |
| |
| def test_indent_nomargin_default(self): |
| # indent should do nothing if 'prefix' is empty. |
| for text in self.CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, ''), text) |
| |
| def test_indent_nomargin_explicit_default(self): |
| # The same as test_indent_nomargin, but explicitly requesting |
| # the default behaviour by passing None as the predicate |
| for text in self.CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, '', None), text) |
| |
| def test_indent_nomargin_all_lines(self): |
| # The same as test_indent_nomargin, but using the optional |
| # predicate argument |
| predicate = lambda line: True |
| for text in self.CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, '', predicate), text) |
| |
| def test_indent_no_lines(self): |
| # Explicitly skip indenting any lines |
| predicate = lambda line: False |
| for text in self.CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, ' ', predicate), text) |
| |
| def test_roundtrip_spaces(self): |
| # A whitespace prefix should roundtrip with dedent |
| for text in self.ROUNDTRIP_CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(dedent(indent(text, ' ')), text) |
| |
| def test_roundtrip_tabs(self): |
| # A whitespace prefix should roundtrip with dedent |
| for text in self.ROUNDTRIP_CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(dedent(indent(text, '\t\t')), text) |
| |
| def test_roundtrip_mixed(self): |
| # A whitespace prefix should roundtrip with dedent |
| for text in self.ROUNDTRIP_CASES: |
| self.assertEqual(dedent(indent(text, ' \t \t ')), text) |
| |
| def test_indent_default(self): |
| # Test default indenting of lines that are not whitespace only |
| prefix = ' ' |
| expected = ( |
| # Basic test case |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.", |
| # Include a blank line |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n\n Testing.", |
| # Include leading and trailing blank lines |
| "\n Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.\n", |
| # Use Windows line endings |
| " Hi.\r\n This is a test.\r\n Testing.\r\n", |
| # Pathological case |
| "\n Hi.\r\n This is a test.\n\r\n Testing.\r\n\n", |
| ) |
| for text, expect in zip(self.CASES, expected): |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, prefix), expect) |
| |
| def test_indent_explicit_default(self): |
| # Test default indenting of lines that are not whitespace only |
| prefix = ' ' |
| expected = ( |
| # Basic test case |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.", |
| # Include a blank line |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n\n Testing.", |
| # Include leading and trailing blank lines |
| "\n Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.\n", |
| # Use Windows line endings |
| " Hi.\r\n This is a test.\r\n Testing.\r\n", |
| # Pathological case |
| "\n Hi.\r\n This is a test.\n\r\n Testing.\r\n\n", |
| ) |
| for text, expect in zip(self.CASES, expected): |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, prefix, None), expect) |
| |
| def test_indent_all_lines(self): |
| # Add 'prefix' to all lines, including whitespace-only ones. |
| prefix = ' ' |
| expected = ( |
| # Basic test case |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.", |
| # Include a blank line |
| " Hi.\n This is a test.\n \n Testing.", |
| # Include leading and trailing blank lines |
| " \n Hi.\n This is a test.\n Testing.\n", |
| # Use Windows line endings |
| " Hi.\r\n This is a test.\r\n Testing.\r\n", |
| # Pathological case |
| " \n Hi.\r\n This is a test.\n \r\n Testing.\r\n \n", |
| ) |
| predicate = lambda line: True |
| for text, expect in zip(self.CASES, expected): |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, prefix, predicate), expect) |
| |
| def test_indent_empty_lines(self): |
| # Add 'prefix' solely to whitespace-only lines. |
| prefix = ' ' |
| expected = ( |
| # Basic test case |
| "Hi.\nThis is a test.\nTesting.", |
| # Include a blank line |
| "Hi.\nThis is a test.\n \nTesting.", |
| # Include leading and trailing blank lines |
| " \nHi.\nThis is a test.\nTesting.\n", |
| # Use Windows line endings |
| "Hi.\r\nThis is a test.\r\nTesting.\r\n", |
| # Pathological case |
| " \nHi.\r\nThis is a test.\n \r\nTesting.\r\n \n", |
| ) |
| predicate = lambda line: not line.strip() |
| for text, expect in zip(self.CASES, expected): |
| self.assertEqual(indent(text, prefix, predicate), expect) |
| |
| |
| class ShortenTestCase(BaseTestCase): |
| |
| def check_shorten(self, text, width, expect, **kwargs): |
| result = shorten(text, width, **kwargs) |
| self.check(result, expect) |
| |
| def test_simple(self): |
| # Simple case: just words, spaces, and a bit of punctuation |
| text = "Hello there, how are you this fine day? I'm glad to hear it!" |
| |
| self.check_shorten(text, 18, "Hello there, [...]") |
| self.check_shorten(text, len(text), text) |
| self.check_shorten(text, len(text) - 1, |
| "Hello there, how are you this fine day? " |
| "I'm glad to [...]") |
| |
| def test_placeholder(self): |
| text = "Hello there, how are you this fine day? I'm glad to hear it!" |
| |
| self.check_shorten(text, 17, "Hello there,$$", placeholder='$$') |
| self.check_shorten(text, 18, "Hello there, how$$", placeholder='$$') |
| self.check_shorten(text, 18, "Hello there, $$", placeholder=' $$') |
| self.check_shorten(text, len(text), text, placeholder='$$') |
| self.check_shorten(text, len(text) - 1, |
| "Hello there, how are you this fine day? " |
| "I'm glad to hear$$", placeholder='$$') |
| |
| def test_empty_string(self): |
| self.check_shorten("", 6, "") |
| |
| def test_whitespace(self): |
| # Whitespace collapsing |
| text = """ |
| This is a paragraph that already has |
| line breaks and \t tabs too.""" |
| self.check_shorten(text, 62, |
| "This is a paragraph that already has line " |
| "breaks and tabs too.") |
| self.check_shorten(text, 61, |
| "This is a paragraph that already has line " |
| "breaks and [...]") |
| |
| self.check_shorten("hello world! ", 12, "hello world!") |
| self.check_shorten("hello world! ", 11, "hello [...]") |
| # The leading space is trimmed from the placeholder |
| # (it would be ugly otherwise). |
| self.check_shorten("hello world! ", 10, "[...]") |
| |
| def test_width_too_small_for_placeholder(self): |
| shorten("x" * 20, width=8, placeholder="(......)") |
| with self.assertRaises(ValueError): |
| shorten("x" * 20, width=8, placeholder="(.......)") |
| |
| def test_first_word_too_long_but_placeholder_fits(self): |
| self.check_shorten("Helloo", 5, "[...]") |
| |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| unittest.main() |