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Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +00001\section{\module{doctest} ---
2 Test docstrings represent reality}
3
4\declaremodule{standard}{doctest}
5\moduleauthor{Tim Peters}{tim_one@users.sourceforge.net}
6\sectionauthor{Tim Peters}{tim_one@users.sourceforge.net}
7\sectionauthor{Moshe Zadka}{moshez@debian.org}
8
9\modulesynopsis{A framework for verifying examples in docstrings.}
10
11The \module{doctest} module searches a module's docstrings for text that looks
12like an interactive Python session, then executes all such sessions to verify
13they still work exactly as shown. Here's a complete but small example:
14
15\begin{verbatim}
16"""
17This is module example.
18
19Example supplies one function, factorial. For example,
20
21>>> factorial(5)
22120
23"""
24
25def factorial(n):
26 """Return the factorial of n, an exact integer >= 0.
27
28 If the result is small enough to fit in an int, return an int.
29 Else return a long.
30
31 >>> [factorial(n) for n in range(6)]
32 [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
33 >>> [factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)]
34 [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
35 >>> factorial(30)
36 265252859812191058636308480000000L
37 >>> factorial(30L)
38 265252859812191058636308480000000L
39 >>> factorial(-1)
40 Traceback (most recent call last):
41 ...
42 ValueError: n must be >= 0
43
44 Factorials of floats are OK, but the float must be an exact integer:
45 >>> factorial(30.1)
46 Traceback (most recent call last):
47 ...
48 ValueError: n must be exact integer
49 >>> factorial(30.0)
50 265252859812191058636308480000000L
51
52 It must also not be ridiculously large:
53 >>> factorial(1e100)
54 Traceback (most recent call last):
55 ...
56 OverflowError: n too large
57 """
58
59\end{verbatim}
60% allow LaTeX to break here.
61\begin{verbatim}
62
63 import math
64 if not n >= 0:
65 raise ValueError("n must be >= 0")
66 if math.floor(n) != n:
67 raise ValueError("n must be exact integer")
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +000068 if n+1 == n: # catch a value like 1e300
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +000069 raise OverflowError("n too large")
70 result = 1
71 factor = 2
72 while factor <= n:
73 try:
74 result *= factor
75 except OverflowError:
76 result *= long(factor)
77 factor += 1
78 return result
79
80def _test():
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +000081 import doctest
82 return doctest.testmod()
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +000083
84if __name__ == "__main__":
85 _test()
86\end{verbatim}
87
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +000088If you run \file{example.py} directly from the command line,
89\module{doctest} works its magic:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +000090
91\begin{verbatim}
92$ python example.py
93$
94\end{verbatim}
95
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +000096There's no output! That's normal, and it means all the examples
97worked. Pass \programopt{-v} to the script, and \module{doctest}
98prints a detailed log of what it's trying, and prints a summary at the
99end:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000100
101\begin{verbatim}
102$ python example.py -v
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000103Trying: factorial(5)
104Expecting: 120
105ok
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000106Trying: [factorial(n) for n in range(6)]
107Expecting: [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
108ok
109Trying: [factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)]
110Expecting: [1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000111ok
112\end{verbatim}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000113
114And so on, eventually ending with:
115
116\begin{verbatim}
117Trying: factorial(1e100)
118Expecting:
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000119 Traceback (most recent call last):
120 ...
121 OverflowError: n too large
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000122ok
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +00001232 items passed all tests:
124 1 tests in example
125 8 tests in example.factorial
1269 tests in 2 items.
1279 passed and 0 failed.
128Test passed.
129$
130\end{verbatim}
131
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000132That's all you need to know to start making productive use of
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000133\module{doctest}! Jump in. The following sections provide full
134details. Note that there are many examples of doctests in
135the standard Python test suite and libraries.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000136
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000137\subsection{Simple Usage}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000138
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000139The simplest way to start using doctest (but not necessarily the way
140you'll continue to do it) is to end each module \module{M} with:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000141
142\begin{verbatim}
143def _test():
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000144 import doctest
145 return doctest.testmod()
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000146
147if __name__ == "__main__":
148 _test()
149\end{verbatim}
150
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000151\module{doctest} then examines docstrings in the module calling
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000152\function{testmod()}.
Martin v. Löwis4581cfa2002-11-22 08:23:09 +0000153
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000154Running the module as a script causes the examples in the docstrings
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000155to get executed and verified:
156
157\begin{verbatim}
158python M.py
159\end{verbatim}
160
161This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the
162failing example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout,
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000163and the final line of output is
Tim Peters26039602004-08-13 01:49:12 +0000164\samp{'***Test Failed*** \var{N} failures.'}, where \var{N} is the
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000165number of examples that failed.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000166
Fred Drake7eb14632001-02-17 17:32:41 +0000167Run it with the \programopt{-v} switch instead:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000168
169\begin{verbatim}
170python M.py -v
171\end{verbatim}
172
Fred Drake8836e562003-07-17 15:22:47 +0000173and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to standard
174output, along with assorted summaries at the end.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000175
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000176You can force verbose mode by passing \code{verbose=True} to
Fred Drake5d2f5152003-06-28 03:09:06 +0000177\function{testmod()}, or
Tim Petersc2388a22004-08-10 01:41:28 +0000178prohibit it by passing \code{verbose=False}. In either of those cases,
Fred Drake5d2f5152003-06-28 03:09:06 +0000179\code{sys.argv} is not examined by \function{testmod()}.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000180
Fred Drake5d2f5152003-06-28 03:09:06 +0000181In any case, \function{testmod()} returns a 2-tuple of ints \code{(\var{f},
Fred Drake7eb14632001-02-17 17:32:41 +0000182\var{t})}, where \var{f} is the number of docstring examples that
183failed and \var{t} is the total number of docstring examples
184attempted.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000185
186\subsection{Which Docstrings Are Examined?}
187
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000188The module docstring, and all function, class and method docstrings are
189searched. Objects imported into the module are not searched.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000190
Fred Drake7eb14632001-02-17 17:32:41 +0000191In addition, if \code{M.__test__} exists and "is true", it must be a
192dict, and each entry maps a (string) name to a function object, class
193object, or string. Function and class object docstrings found from
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000194\code{M.__test__} are searched, and strings are treated as if they
195were docstrings. In output, a key \code{K} in \code{M.__test__} appears
196with name
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000197
198\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8836e562003-07-17 15:22:47 +0000199<name of M>.__test__.K
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000200\end{verbatim}
201
202Any classes found are recursively searched similarly, to test docstrings in
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000203their contained methods and nested classes.
204
205\versionchanged[A "private name" concept is deprecated and no longer
Tim Peters26039602004-08-13 01:49:12 +0000206 documented]{2.4}
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000207
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000208
209\subsection{What's the Execution Context?}
210
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000211By default, each time \function{testmod()} finds a docstring to test, it
212uses a \emph{shallow copy} of \module{M}'s globals, so that running tests
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000213doesn't change the module's real globals, and so that one test in
214\module{M} can't leave behind crumbs that accidentally allow another test
215to work. This means examples can freely use any names defined at top-level
Tim Peters0481d242001-10-02 21:01:22 +0000216in \module{M}, and names defined earlier in the docstring being run.
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000217Examples cannot see names defined in other docstrings.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000218
219You can force use of your own dict as the execution context by passing
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000220\code{globs=your_dict} to \function{testmod()} instead.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000221
222\subsection{What About Exceptions?}
223
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000224No problem: just paste in the expected traceback. Since
225tracebacks contain details that are likely to change
226rapidly (for example, exact file paths and line numbers), this is one
227case where doctest works hard to be flexible in what it accepts.
228This makes the full story involved, but you really don't have
229to remember much. Simple example:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000230
231\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000232>>> [1, 2, 3].remove(42)
233Traceback (most recent call last):
234 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
235ValueError: list.remove(x): x not in list
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000236\end{verbatim}
237
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000238That doctest succeeds if \exception{ValueError} is raised, with the
239\samp{list.remove(x): x not in list} detail as shown.\footnote{The
240 doctest also succeeds if it prints the exact text of the traceback
241 message; otherwise, it fails.}
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000242
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000243The expected output for an exception must start with a traceback
244header, which may be either of the following two lines, indented the
245same as the first line of the example:
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000246
247\begin{verbatim}
248Traceback (most recent call last):
249Traceback (innermost last):
250\end{verbatim}
251
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000252The traceback header is followed by an optional traceback stack, whose
253contents are ignored by doctest. Each line of the traceback stack
254must be indented further than the first line of the example, \emph{or}
255start with a non-alphanumeric character. Typically, the traceback
256stack is either omitted or copied verbatim from an interactive
257session.
258
259The traceback stack is followed by the most interesting part: the
260line(s) containing the exception type and detail. This is usually the
261last line of a traceback, but can extend across multiple lines if the
262exception has a multi-line detail, as illustrated in the following
263example:
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000264
265\begin{verbatim}
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000266>>> raise ValueError('multi\n line\ndetail')
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000267Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000268 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
269ValueError: multi
270 line
271detail
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000272\end{verbatim}
273
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000274The last three (starting with \exception{ValueError}) lines are
275compared against the exception's type and detail, and the rest are
276ignored.
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000277
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000278Best practice is to omit the traceback stack, unless it adds
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000279significant documentation value to the example. So the example above
280is probably better as:
281
282\begin{verbatim}
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000283>>> raise ValueError('multi\n line\ndetail')
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000284Traceback (most recent call last):
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000285 ...
286ValueError: multi
287 line
288detail
Tim Peters41a65ea2004-08-13 03:55:05 +0000289\end{verbatim}
290
291Note the tracebacks are treated very specially. In particular, in the
292rewritten example, the use of \samp{...} is independent of doctest's
293\constant{ELLIPSIS} option. The ellipsis in that example could
294be left out, or could just as well be three (or three hundred) commas.
295
Tim Peters0e448072004-08-26 01:02:08 +0000296\versionchanged[The ability to handle a multi-line exception detail
297 was added]{2.4}
298
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000299\subsection{Option Flags and Directives\label{doctest-options}}
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000300
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000301A number of option flags control various aspects of doctest's comparison
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000302behavior. Symbolic names for the flags are supplied as module constants,
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000303which can be or'ed together and passed to various functions. The names
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000304can also be used in doctest directives (see below).
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000305
306\begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1}
307 By default, if an expected output block contains just \code{1},
308 an actual output block containing just \code{1} or just
309 \code{True} is considered to be a match, and similarly for \code{0}
310 versus \code{False}. When \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} is
311 specified, neither substitution is allowed. The default behavior
312 caters to that Python changed the return type of many functions
313 from integer to boolean; doctests expecting "little integer"
314 output still work in these cases. This option will probably go
315 away, but not for several years.
316\end{datadesc}
317
318\begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE}
319 By default, if an expected output block contains a line
320 containing only the string \code{<BLANKLINE>}, then that line
321 will match a blank line in the actual output. Because a
322 genuinely blank line delimits the expected output, this is
323 the only way to communicate that a blank line is expected. When
324 \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE} is specified, this substitution
325 is not allowed.
326\end{datadesc}
327
328\begin{datadesc}{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE}
329 When specified, all sequences of whitespace (blanks and newlines) are
330 treated as equal. Any sequence of whitespace within the expected
331 output will match any sequence of whitespace within the actual output.
332 By default, whitespace must match exactly.
333 \constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE} is especially useful when a line
334 of expected output is very long, and you want to wrap it across
335 multiple lines in your source.
336\end{datadesc}
337
338\begin{datadesc}{ELLIPSIS}
339 When specified, an ellipsis marker (\code{...}) in the expected output
340 can match any substring in the actual output. This includes
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000341 substrings that span line boundaries, and empty substrings, so it's
342 best to keep usage of this simple. Complicated uses can lead to the
343 same kinds of "oops, it matched too much!" surprises that \regexp{.*}
344 is prone to in regular expressions.
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000345\end{datadesc}
346
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +0000347\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_UDIFF}
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000348 When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and
349 actual outputs are displayed using a unified diff.
350\end{datadesc}
351
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +0000352\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_CDIFF}
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000353 When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and
354 actual outputs will be displayed using a context diff.
355\end{datadesc}
356
Edward Loper71f55af2004-08-26 01:41:51 +0000357\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_NDIFF}
Tim Petersc6cbab02004-08-22 19:43:28 +0000358 When specified, differences are computed by \code{difflib.Differ},
359 using the same algorithm as the popular \file{ndiff.py} utility.
360 This is the only method that marks differences within lines as
361 well as across lines. For example, if a line of expected output
362 contains digit \code{1} where actual output contains letter \code{l},
363 a line is inserted with a caret marking the mismatching column
364 positions.
365\end{datadesc}
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000366
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +0000367\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE}
368 When specified, display the first failing example in each doctest,
369 but suppress output for all remaining examples. This will prevent
370 doctest from reporting correct examples that break because of
371 earlier failures; but it might also hide incorrect examples that
372 fail independently of the first failure. When
373 \constant{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE} is specified, the remaining
374 examples are still run, and still count towards the total number of
375 failures reported; only the output is suppressed.
376\end{datadesc}
377
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000378A "doctest directive" is a trailing Python comment on a line of a doctest
379example:
380
381\begin{productionlist}[doctest]
382 \production{directive}
Johannes Gijsbersc8906182004-08-20 14:37:05 +0000383 {"\#" "doctest:" \token{on_or_off} \token{directive_name}}
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000384 \production{on_or_off}
385 {"+" | "-"}
386 \production{directive_name}
387 {"DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE" | "NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE" | ...}
388\end{productionlist}
389
390Whitespace is not allowed between the \code{+} or \code{-} and the
391directive name. The directive name can be any of the option names
392explained above.
393
394The doctest directives appearing in a single example modify doctest's
395behavior for that single example. Use \code{+} to enable the named
396behavior, or \code{-} to disable it.
397
398For example, this test passes:
399
400\begin{verbatim}
401>>> print range(20) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
402[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
40310, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]
404\end{verbatim}
405
406Without the directive it would fail, both because the actual output
407doesn't have two blanks before the single-digit list elements, and
408because the actual output is on a single line. This test also passes,
409and requires a directive to do so:
410
411\begin{verbatim}
412>>> print range(20) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS
413[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
414\end{verbatim}
415
416Only one directive per physical line is accepted. If you want to
417use multiple directives for a single example, you can add
418\samp{...} lines to your example containing only directives:
419
420\begin{verbatim}
421>>> print range(20) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
422... #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
423[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
424\end{verbatim}
425
426Note that since all options are disabled by default, and directives apply
427only to the example they appear in, enabling options (via \code{+} in a
428directive) is usually the only meaningful choice. However, option flags
429can also be passed to functions that run doctests, establishing different
430defaults. In such cases, disabling an option via \code{-} in a directive
431can be useful.
432
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000433\versionchanged[Constants \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE},
434 \constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE}, \constant{ELLIPSIS},
Edward Lopera89f88d2004-08-26 02:45:51 +0000435 \constant{REPORT_UDIFF}, \constant{REPORT_CDIFF},
436 \constant{REPORT_NDIFF}, and \constant{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE}
Tim Peters026f8dc2004-08-19 16:38:58 +0000437 were added; by default \code{<BLANKLINE>} in expected output
438 matches an empty line in actual output; and doctest directives
439 were added]{2.4}
440
Tim Peters8a3b69c2004-08-12 22:31:25 +0000441
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000442\subsection{Advanced Usage}
443
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000444Several module level functions are available for controlling how doctests
445are run.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000446
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000447\begin{funcdesc}{debug}{module, name}
448 Debug a single docstring containing doctests.
449
450 Provide the \var{module} (or dotted name of the module) containing the
451 docstring to be debugged and the \var{name} (within the module) of the
452 object with the docstring to be debugged.
453
454 The doctest examples are extracted (see function \function{testsource()}),
455 and written to a temporary file. The Python debugger, \refmodule{pdb},
Fred Drake8836e562003-07-17 15:22:47 +0000456 is then invoked on that file.
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000457 \versionadded{2.3}
458\end{funcdesc}
459
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000460\begin{funcdesc}{testmod}{\optional{m}\optional{, name}\optional{,
461 globs}\optional{, verbose}\optional{,
462 isprivate}\optional{, report}\optional{,
463 optionflags}\optional{, extraglobs}\optional{,
464 raise_on_error}}
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000465
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000466 All arguments are optional, and all except for \var{m} should be
467 specified in keyword form.
468
469 Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable
470 from module \var{m} (or the current module if \var{m} is not supplied
471 or is \code{None}), starting with \code{\var{m}.__doc__}.
472
473 Also test examples reachable from dict \code{\var{m}.__test__}, if it
474 exists and is not \code{None}. \code{\var{m}.__test__} maps
475 names (strings) to functions, classes and strings; function and class
476 docstrings are searched for examples; strings are searched directly,
477 as if they were docstrings.
478
479 Only docstrings attached to objects belonging to module \var{m} are
480 searched.
481
482 Return \samp{(\var{failure_count}, \var{test_count})}.
483
484 Optional argument \var{name} gives the name of the module; by default,
485 or if \code{None}, \code{\var{m}.__name__} is used.
486
487 Optional argument \var{globs} gives a dict to be used as the globals
488 when executing examples; by default, or if \code{None},
489 \code{\var{m}.__dict__} is used. A new shallow copy of this dict is
490 created for each docstring with examples, so that each docstring's
491 examples start with a clean slate.
492
493 Optional argument \var{extraglobs} gives a dict merged into the
494 globals used to execute examples. This works like
495 \method{dict.update()}: if \var{globs} and \var{extraglobs} have a
496 common key, the associated value in \var{extraglobs} appears in the
497 combined dict. By default, or if \code{None}, no extra globals are
498 used. This is an advanced feature that allows parameterization of
499 doctests. For example, a doctest can be written for a base class, using
500 a generic name for the class, then reused to test any number of
501 subclasses by passing an \var{extraglobs} dict mapping the generic
502 name to the subclass to be tested.
503
504 Optional argument \var{verbose} prints lots of stuff if true, and prints
505 only failures if false; by default, or if \code{None}, it's true
506 if and only if \code{'-v'} is in \code{sys.argv}.
507
508 Optional argument \var{report} prints a summary at the end when true,
509 else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is
510 detailed, else the summary is very brief (in fact, empty if all tests
511 passed).
512
513 Optional argument \var{optionflags} or's together option flags. See
514 see section \ref{doctest-options}.
515
516 Optional argument \var{raise_on_error} defaults to false. If true,
517 an exception is raised upon the first failure or unexpected exception
518 in an example. This allows failures to be post-mortem debugged.
519 Default behavior is to continue running examples.
520
521 Optional argument \var{isprivate} specifies a function used to
522 determine whether a name is private. The default function treats
523 all names as public. \var{isprivate} can be set to
524 \code{doctest.is_private} to skip over names that are
525 private according to Python's underscore naming convention.
526 \deprecated{2.4}{\var{isprivate} was a stupid idea -- don't use it.
527 If you need to skip tests based on name, filter the list returned by
528 \code{DocTestFinder.find()} instead.}
529
530 \versionchanged[The parameter \var{optionflags} was added]{2.3}
531
532 \versionchanged[The parameters \var{extraglobs} and \var{raise_on_error}
533 were added]{2.4}
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000534\end{funcdesc}
535
536\begin{funcdesc}{testsource}{module, name}
537 Extract the doctest examples from a docstring.
538
539 Provide the \var{module} (or dotted name of the module) containing the
540 tests to be extracted and the \var{name} (within the module) of the object
541 with the docstring containing the tests to be extracted.
542
543 The doctest examples are returned as a string containing Python
544 code. The expected output blocks in the examples are converted
545 to Python comments.
546 \versionadded{2.3}
547\end{funcdesc}
548
549\begin{funcdesc}{DocTestSuite}{\optional{module}}
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000550 Convert doctest tests for a module to a
551 \class{\refmodule{unittest}.TestSuite}.
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000552
553 The returned \class{TestSuite} is to be run by the unittest framework
554 and runs each doctest in the module. If any of the doctests fail,
555 then the synthesized unit test fails, and a \exception{DocTestTestFailure}
556 exception is raised showing the name of the file containing the test and a
557 (sometimes approximate) line number.
558
559 The optional \var{module} argument provides the module to be tested. It
560 can be a module object or a (possibly dotted) module name. If not
Fred Drake8836e562003-07-17 15:22:47 +0000561 specified, the module calling this function is used.
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000562
563 Example using one of the many ways that the \refmodule{unittest} module
564 can use a \class{TestSuite}:
565
566 \begin{verbatim}
567 import unittest
568 import doctest
569 import my_module_with_doctests
570
571 suite = doctest.DocTestSuite(my_module_with_doctests)
572 runner = unittest.TextTestRunner()
573 runner.run(suite)
574 \end{verbatim}
575
576 \versionadded{2.3}
Fred Drake8836e562003-07-17 15:22:47 +0000577 \warning{This function does not currently search \code{M.__test__}
Raymond Hettinger943277e2003-07-17 14:47:12 +0000578 and its search technique does not exactly match \function{testmod()} in
579 every detail. Future versions will bring the two into convergence.}
Raymond Hettinger92f21b12003-07-11 22:32:18 +0000580\end{funcdesc}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000581
582
583\subsection{How are Docstring Examples Recognized?}
584
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000585In most cases a copy-and-paste of an interactive console session works
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000586fine, but doctest isn't trying to do an exact emulation of any specific
587Python shell. All hard tab characters are expanded to spaces, using
5888-column tab stops. If you don't believe tabs should mean that, too
589bad: don't use hard tabs, or write your own \class{DocTestParser}
590class.
591
592\versionchanged[Expanding tabs to spaces is new; previous versions
593 tried to preserve hard tabs, with confusing results]{2.4}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000594
595\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000596>>> # comments are ignored
597>>> x = 12
598>>> x
59912
600>>> if x == 13:
601... print "yes"
602... else:
603... print "no"
604... print "NO"
605... print "NO!!!"
606...
607no
608NO
609NO!!!
610>>>
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000611\end{verbatim}
612
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000613Any expected output must immediately follow the final
614\code{'>\code{>}>~'} or \code{'...~'} line containing the code, and
615the expected output (if any) extends to the next \code{'>\code{>}>~'}
616or all-whitespace line.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000617
618The fine print:
619
620\begin{itemize}
621
622\item Expected output cannot contain an all-whitespace line, since such a
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000623 line is taken to signal the end of expected output. If expected
624 output does contain a blank line, put \code{<BLANKLINE>} in your
625 doctest example each place a blank line is expected.
626 \versionchanged[\code{<BLANKLINE>} was added; there was no way to
627 use expected output containing empty lines in
628 previous versions]{2.4}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000629
630\item Output to stdout is captured, but not output to stderr (exception
631 tracebacks are captured via a different means).
632
Martin v. Löwis92816de2004-05-31 19:01:00 +0000633\item If you continue a line via backslashing in an interactive session,
634 or for any other reason use a backslash, you should use a raw
635 docstring, which will preserve your backslahses exactly as you type
636 them:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000637
638\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters336689b2004-07-23 02:48:24 +0000639>>> def f(x):
Martin v. Löwis92816de2004-05-31 19:01:00 +0000640... r'''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n'''
641>>> print f.__doc__
642Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n
643\end{verbatim}
Tim Peters336689b2004-07-23 02:48:24 +0000644
Martin v. Löwis92816de2004-05-31 19:01:00 +0000645 Otherwise, the backslash will be interpreted as part of the string.
Edward Loper19b19582004-08-25 23:07:03 +0000646 E.g., the "{\textbackslash}" above would be interpreted as a newline
Martin v. Löwis92816de2004-05-31 19:01:00 +0000647 character. Alternatively, you can double each backslash in the
648 doctest version (and not use a raw string):
649
650\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters336689b2004-07-23 02:48:24 +0000651>>> def f(x):
Martin v. Löwis92816de2004-05-31 19:01:00 +0000652... '''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\\n'''
653>>> print f.__doc__
654Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000655\end{verbatim}
656
Tim Petersf0768c82001-02-20 10:57:30 +0000657\item The starting column doesn't matter:
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000658
659\begin{verbatim}
Tim Petersc4089d82001-02-17 18:03:25 +0000660 >>> assert "Easy!"
661 >>> import math
662 >>> math.floor(1.9)
663 1.0
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000664\end{verbatim}
665
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000666and as many leading whitespace characters are stripped from the
667expected output as appeared in the initial \code{'>\code{>}>~'} line
Tim Peters83e259a2004-08-13 21:55:21 +0000668that started the example.
Fred Drake7eb14632001-02-17 17:32:41 +0000669\end{itemize}
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000670
671\subsection{Warnings}
672
673\begin{enumerate}
674
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000675\item \module{doctest} is serious about requiring exact matches in expected
676 output. If even a single character doesn't match, the test fails. This
677 will probably surprise you a few times, as you learn exactly what Python
678 does and doesn't guarantee about output. For example, when printing a
679 dict, Python doesn't guarantee that the key-value pairs will be printed
680 in any particular order, so a test like
681
682% Hey! What happened to Monty Python examples?
Tim Petersf0768c82001-02-20 10:57:30 +0000683% Tim: ask Guido -- it's his example!
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000684\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000685>>> foo()
686{"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"}
687>>>
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000688\end{verbatim}
689
690is vulnerable! One workaround is to do
691
692\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000693>>> foo() == {"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"}
Martin v. Löwisccabed32003-11-27 19:48:03 +0000694True
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000695>>>
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000696\end{verbatim}
697
698instead. Another is to do
699
700\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000701>>> d = foo().items()
702>>> d.sort()
703>>> d
704[('Harry', 'broomstick'), ('Hermione', 'hippogryph')]
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000705\end{verbatim}
706
707There are others, but you get the idea.
708
709Another bad idea is to print things that embed an object address, like
710
711\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000712>>> id(1.0) # certain to fail some of the time
7137948648
714>>>
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000715\end{verbatim}
716
717Floating-point numbers are also subject to small output variations across
718platforms, because Python defers to the platform C library for float
719formatting, and C libraries vary widely in quality here.
720
721\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000722>>> 1./7 # risky
7230.14285714285714285
724>>> print 1./7 # safer
7250.142857142857
726>>> print round(1./7, 6) # much safer
7270.142857
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000728\end{verbatim}
729
730Numbers of the form \code{I/2.**J} are safe across all platforms, and I
731often contrive doctest examples to produce numbers of that form:
732
733\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake19f3c522001-02-22 23:15:05 +0000734>>> 3./4 # utterly safe
7350.75
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000736\end{verbatim}
737
738Simple fractions are also easier for people to understand, and that makes
739for better documentation.
740
Skip Montanaro1dc98c42001-06-08 14:40:28 +0000741\item Be careful if you have code that must only execute once.
742
743If you have module-level code that must only execute once, a more foolproof
Fred Drakec1158352001-06-11 14:55:01 +0000744definition of \function{_test()} is
Skip Montanaro1dc98c42001-06-08 14:40:28 +0000745
746\begin{verbatim}
747def _test():
748 import doctest, sys
Martin v. Löwis4581cfa2002-11-22 08:23:09 +0000749 doctest.testmod()
Skip Montanaro1dc98c42001-06-08 14:40:28 +0000750\end{verbatim}
Tim Peters6ebe61f2003-06-27 20:48:05 +0000751
752\item WYSIWYG isn't always the case, starting in Python 2.3. The
Fred Drake5d2f5152003-06-28 03:09:06 +0000753 string form of boolean results changed from \code{'0'} and
754 \code{'1'} to \code{'False'} and \code{'True'} in Python 2.3.
Tim Peters6ebe61f2003-06-27 20:48:05 +0000755 This makes it clumsy to write a doctest showing boolean results that
756 passes under multiple versions of Python. In Python 2.3, by default,
757 and as a special case, if an expected output block consists solely
Fred Drake5d2f5152003-06-28 03:09:06 +0000758 of \code{'0'} and the actual output block consists solely of
759 \code{'False'}, that's accepted as an exact match, and similarly for
760 \code{'1'} versus \code{'True'}. This behavior can be turned off by
Tim Peters6ebe61f2003-06-27 20:48:05 +0000761 passing the new (in 2.3) module constant
762 \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} as the value of \function{testmod()}'s
763 new (in 2.3) optional \var{optionflags} argument. Some years after
764 the integer spellings of booleans are history, this hack will
765 probably be removed again.
766
Fred Drakec1158352001-06-11 14:55:01 +0000767\end{enumerate}
768
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000769
770\subsection{Soapbox}
771
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000772The first word in ``doctest'' is ``doc,'' and that's why the author
773wrote \refmodule{doctest}: to keep documentation up to date. It so
774happens that \refmodule{doctest} makes a pleasant unit testing
775environment, but that's not its primary purpose.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000776
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000777Choose docstring examples with care. There's an art to this that
778needs to be learned---it may not be natural at first. Examples should
779add genuine value to the documentation. A good example can often be
780worth many words. If possible, show just a few normal cases, show
781endcases, show interesting subtle cases, and show an example of each
782kind of exception that can be raised. You're probably testing for
783endcases and subtle cases anyway in an interactive shell:
784\refmodule{doctest} wants to make it as easy as possible to capture
785those sessions, and will verify they continue to work as designed
786forever after.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000787
Fred Drake7a6b4f02003-07-17 16:00:01 +0000788If done with care, the examples will be invaluable for your users, and
789will pay back the time it takes to collect them many times over as the
790years go by and things change. I'm still amazed at how often one of
791my \refmodule{doctest} examples stops working after a ``harmless''
792change.
Tim Peters76882292001-02-17 05:58:44 +0000793
794For exhaustive testing, or testing boring cases that add no value to the
Fred Drake7eb14632001-02-17 17:32:41 +0000795docs, define a \code{__test__} dict instead. That's what it's for.