| """Test correct operation of the print function. |
| """ |
| |
| # In 2.6, this gives us the behavior we want. In 3.0, it has |
| # no function, but it still must parse correctly. |
| from __future__ import print_function |
| |
| import unittest |
| from test import support |
| |
| try: |
| # 3.x |
| from io import StringIO |
| except ImportError: |
| # 2.x |
| from StringIO import StringIO |
| |
| NotDefined = object() |
| |
| # A dispatch table all 8 combinations of providing |
| # sep, end, and file |
| # I use this machinery so that I'm not just passing default |
| # values to print, I'm eiher passing or not passing in the |
| # arguments |
| dispatch = { |
| (False, False, False): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(*args), |
| (False, False, True): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(file=file, *args), |
| (False, True, False): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(end=end, *args), |
| (False, True, True): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(end=end, file=file, *args), |
| (True, False, False): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(sep=sep, *args), |
| (True, False, True): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(sep=sep, file=file, *args), |
| (True, True, False): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(sep=sep, end=end, *args), |
| (True, True, True): |
| lambda args, sep, end, file: print(sep=sep, end=end, file=file, *args), |
| } |
| |
| # Class used to test __str__ and print |
| class ClassWith__str__: |
| def __init__(self, x): |
| self.x = x |
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.x |
| |
| class TestPrint(unittest.TestCase): |
| def check(self, expected, args, |
| sep=NotDefined, end=NotDefined, file=NotDefined): |
| # Capture sys.stdout in a StringIO. Call print with args, |
| # and with sep, end, and file, if they're defined. Result |
| # must match expected. |
| |
| # Look up the actual function to call, based on if sep, end, and file |
| # are defined |
| fn = dispatch[(sep is not NotDefined, |
| end is not NotDefined, |
| file is not NotDefined)] |
| |
| with support.captured_stdout() as t: |
| fn(args, sep, end, file) |
| |
| self.assertEqual(t.getvalue(), expected) |
| |
| def test_print(self): |
| def x(expected, args, sep=NotDefined, end=NotDefined): |
| # Run the test 2 ways: not using file, and using |
| # file directed to a StringIO |
| |
| self.check(expected, args, sep=sep, end=end) |
| |
| # When writing to a file, stdout is expected to be empty |
| o = StringIO() |
| self.check('', args, sep=sep, end=end, file=o) |
| |
| # And o will contain the expected output |
| self.assertEqual(o.getvalue(), expected) |
| |
| x('\n', ()) |
| x('a\n', ('a',)) |
| x('None\n', (None,)) |
| x('1 2\n', (1, 2)) |
| x('1 2\n', (1, ' ', 2)) |
| x('1*2\n', (1, 2), sep='*') |
| x('1 s', (1, 's'), end='') |
| x('a\nb\n', ('a', 'b'), sep='\n') |
| x('1.01', (1.0, 1), sep='', end='') |
| x('1*a*1.3+', (1, 'a', 1.3), sep='*', end='+') |
| x('a\n\nb\n', ('a\n', 'b'), sep='\n') |
| x('\0+ +\0\n', ('\0', ' ', '\0'), sep='+') |
| |
| x('a\n b\n', ('a\n', 'b')) |
| x('a\n b\n', ('a\n', 'b'), sep=None) |
| x('a\n b\n', ('a\n', 'b'), end=None) |
| x('a\n b\n', ('a\n', 'b'), sep=None, end=None) |
| |
| x('*\n', (ClassWith__str__('*'),)) |
| x('abc 1\n', (ClassWith__str__('abc'), 1)) |
| |
| # # 2.x unicode tests |
| # x(u'1 2\n', ('1', u'2')) |
| # x(u'u\1234\n', (u'u\1234',)) |
| # x(u' abc 1\n', (' ', ClassWith__str__(u'abc'), 1)) |
| |
| # errors |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, print, '', sep=3) |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, print, '', end=3) |
| self.assertRaises(AttributeError, print, '', file='') |
| |
| def test_main(): |
| support.run_unittest(TestPrint) |
| |
| if __name__ == "__main__": |
| test_main() |