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Metadata-Version: 2.1 |
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Name: parameterized |
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Version: 0.9.0 |
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Summary: Parameterized testing with any Python test framework |
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Author-email: David Wolever <[email protected]> |
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License: FreeBSD |
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Project-URL: Homepage, https: |
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 |
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License |
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Requires-Python: >=3.7 |
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Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst |
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License-File: LICENSE.txt |
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Provides-Extra: dev |
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Requires-Dist: jinja2 ; extra == 'dev' |
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Parameterized testing with any Python test framework |
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==================================================== |
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.. image:: https: |
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:alt: PyPI |
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:target: https: |
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.. image:: https: |
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:alt: PyPI - Downloads |
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:target: https: |
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.. image:: https: |
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:alt: Circle CI |
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:target: https: |
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Parameterized testing in Python sucks. |
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``parameterized`` fixes that. For everything. Parameterized testing for nose, |
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parameterized testing for py.test, parameterized testing for unittest. |
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.. code:: python |
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# test_math.py |
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from nose.tools import assert_equal |
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from parameterized import parameterized, parameterized_class |
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import unittest |
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import math |
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@parameterized([ |
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(2, 2, 4), |
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(2, 3, 8), |
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(1, 9, 1), |
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(0, 9, 0), |
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]) |
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def test_pow(base, exponent, expected): |
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assert_equal(math.pow(base, exponent), expected) |
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class TestMathUnitTest(unittest.TestCase): |
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@parameterized.expand([ |
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("negative", -1.5, -2.0), |
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("integer", 1, 1.0), |
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("large fraction", 1.6, 1), |
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]) |
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def test_floor(self, name, input, expected): |
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assert_equal(math.floor(input), expected) |
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@parameterized_class(('a', 'b', 'expected_sum', 'expected_product'), [ |
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(1, 2, 3, 2), |
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(5, 5, 10, 25), |
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]) |
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class TestMathClass(unittest.TestCase): |
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def test_add(self): |
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assert_equal(self.a + self.b, self.expected_sum) |
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def test_multiply(self): |
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assert_equal(self.a * self.b, self.expected_product) |
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@parameterized_class([ |
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{ "a": 3, "expected": 2 }, |
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{ "b": 5, "expected": -4 }, |
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]) |
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class TestMathClassDict(unittest.TestCase): |
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a = 1 |
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b = 1 |
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def test_subtract(self): |
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assert_equal(self.a - self.b, self.expected) |
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With nose (and nose2):: |
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$ nosetests -v test_math.py |
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test_floor_0_negative (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_floor_1_integer (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_floor_2_large_fraction (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_math.test_pow(2, 2, 4, {}) ... ok |
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test_math.test_pow(2, 3, 8, {}) ... ok |
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test_math.test_pow(1, 9, 1, {}) ... ok |
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test_math.test_pow(0, 9, 0, {}) ... ok |
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test_add (test_math.TestMathClass_0) ... ok |
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test_multiply (test_math.TestMathClass_0) ... ok |
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test_add (test_math.TestMathClass_1) ... ok |
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test_multiply (test_math.TestMathClass_1) ... ok |
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test_subtract (test_math.TestMathClassDict_0) ... ok |
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---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ran 12 tests in 0.015s |
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OK |
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As the package name suggests, nose is best supported and will be used for all |
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further examples. |
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With py.test (version 2.0 and above):: |
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$ py.test -v test_math.py |
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============================= test session starts ============================== |
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platform darwin -- Python 3.6.1, pytest-3.1.3, py-1.4.34, pluggy-0.4.0 |
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collecting ... collected 13 items |
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test_math.py::test_pow::[0] PASSED |
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test_math.py::test_pow::[1] PASSED |
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test_math.py::test_pow::[2] PASSED |
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test_math.py::test_pow::[3] PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathUnitTest::test_floor_0_negative PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathUnitTest::test_floor_1_integer PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathUnitTest::test_floor_2_large_fraction PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathClass_0::test_add PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathClass_0::test_multiply PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathClass_1::test_add PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathClass_1::test_multiply PASSED |
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test_math.py::TestMathClassDict_0::test_subtract PASSED |
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==================== 12 passed, 4 warnings in 0.16 seconds ===================== |
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With unittest (and unittest2):: |
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$ python -m unittest -v test_math |
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test_floor_0_negative (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_floor_1_integer (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_floor_2_large_fraction (test_math.TestMathUnitTest) ... ok |
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test_add (test_math.TestMathClass_0) ... ok |
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test_multiply (test_math.TestMathClass_0) ... ok |
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test_add (test_math.TestMathClass_1) ... ok |
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test_multiply (test_math.TestMathClass_1) ... ok |
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test_subtract (test_math.TestMathClassDict_0) ... ok |
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---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ran 8 tests in 0.001s |
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OK |
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(note: because unittest does not support test decorators, only tests created |
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with ``@parameterized.expand`` will be executed) |
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With green:: |
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$ green test_math.py -vvv |
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test_math |
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TestMathClass_1 |
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. test_method_a |
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. test_method_b |
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TestMathClass_2 |
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. test_method_a |
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. test_method_b |
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TestMathClass_3 |
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. test_method_a |
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. test_method_b |
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TestMathUnitTest |
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. test_floor_0_negative |
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. test_floor_1_integer |
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. test_floor_2_large_fraction |
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TestMathClass_0 |
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. test_add |
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. test_multiply |
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TestMathClass_1 |
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. test_add |
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. test_multiply |
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TestMathClassDict_0 |
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. test_subtract |
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Ran 12 tests in 0.121s |
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OK (passes=9) |
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Installation |
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------------ |
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:: |
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$ pip install parameterized |
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Compatibility |
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------------- |
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`Yes`__ (mostly). |
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__ https: |
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.. list-table:: |
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:header-rows: 1 |
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:stub-columns: 1 |
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* - |
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- Py3.7 |
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- Py3.8 |
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- Py3.9 |
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- Py3.10 |
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- Py3.11 |
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- PyPy3 |
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- ``@mock.patch`` |
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* - nose |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- no§ |
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- no§ |
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- yes |
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* - nose2 |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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* - py.test 2 |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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* - py.test 3 |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- no* |
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- no* |
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- yes |
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* - py.test 4 |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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- no** |
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* - py.test fixtures |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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- no† |
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* - | unittest |
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| (``@parameterized.expand``) |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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* - | unittest2 |
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| (``@parameterized.expand``) |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- yes |
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- no§ |
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- no§ |
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- yes |
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§: nose and unittest2 - both of which were last updated in 2015 - sadly do not |
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appear to support Python 3.10 or 3.11. |
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\*: `py.test 2 does not appear to work under Python 3 (#71)`__, and |
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`py.test 3 does not appear to work under Python 3.10 or 3.11 (#154)`__. |
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\*\*: py.test 4 is not yet supported (but coming!) in `issue #34`__ |
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†: py.test fixture support is documented in `issue #81`__ |
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__ https://github.com/wolever/parameterized/issues/71 |
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__ https://github.com/wolever/parameterized/issues/154 |
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__ https://github.com/wolever/parameterized/issues/34 |
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__ https://github.com/wolever/parameterized/issues/81 |
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Dependencies |
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------------ |
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(this section left intentionally blank) |
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Exhaustive Usage Examples |
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-------------------------- |
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The ``@parameterized`` and ``@parameterized.expand`` decorators accept a list |
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or iterable of tuples or ``param(...)``, or a callable which returns a list or |
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iterable: |
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.. code:: python |
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from parameterized import parameterized, param |
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# A list of tuples |
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@parameterized([ |
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(2, 3, 5), |
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(3, 5, 8), |
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]) |
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def test_add(a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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# A list of params |
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@parameterized([ |
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param("10", 10), |
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param("10", 16, base=16), |
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]) |
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def test_int(str_val, expected, base=10): |
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assert_equal(int(str_val, base=base), expected) |
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# An iterable of params |
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@parameterized( |
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param.explicit(*json.loads(line)) |
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for line in open("testcases.jsons") |
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) |
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def test_from_json_file(...): |
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... |
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# A callable which returns a list of tuples |
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def load_test_cases(): |
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return [ |
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("test1", ), |
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("test2", ), |
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] |
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@parameterized(load_test_cases) |
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def test_from_function(name): |
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... |
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.. ** |
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Note that, when using an iterator or a generator, all the items will be loaded |
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into memory before the start of the test run (we do this explicitly to ensure |
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that generators are exhausted exactly once in multi-process or multi-threaded |
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testing environments). |
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The ``@parameterized`` decorator can be used test class methods, and standalone |
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functions: |
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.. code:: python |
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from parameterized import parameterized |
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class AddTest(object): |
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@parameterized([ |
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(2, 3, 5), |
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]) |
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def test_add(self, a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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@parameterized([ |
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(2, 3, 5), |
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]) |
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def test_add(a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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And ``@parameterized.expand`` can be used to generate test methods in |
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situations where test generators cannot be used (for example, when the test |
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class is a subclass of ``unittest.TestCase``): |
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.. code:: python |
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import unittest |
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from parameterized import parameterized |
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class AddTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
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@parameterized.expand([ |
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("2 and 3", 2, 3, 5), |
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("3 and 5", 3, 5, 8), |
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]) |
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def test_add(self, _, a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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Will create the test cases:: |
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$ nosetests example.py |
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test_add_0_2_and_3 (example.AddTestCase) ... ok |
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test_add_1_3_and_5 (example.AddTestCase) ... ok |
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---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ran 2 tests in 0.001s |
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OK |
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Note that ``@parameterized.expand`` works by creating new methods on the test |
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class. If the first parameter is a string, that string will be added to the end |
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of the method name. For example, the test case above will generate the methods |
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``test_add_0_2_and_3`` and ``test_add_1_3_and_5``. |
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The names of the test cases generated by ``@parameterized.expand`` can be |
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customized using the ``name_func`` keyword argument. The value should |
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be a function which accepts three arguments: ``testcase_func``, ``param_num``, |
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and ``params``, and it should return the name of the test case. |
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``testcase_func`` will be the function to be tested, ``param_num`` will be the |
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index of the test case parameters in the list of parameters, and ``param`` |
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(an instance of ``param``) will be the parameters which will be used. |
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.. code:: python |
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import unittest |
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from parameterized import parameterized |
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def custom_name_func(testcase_func, param_num, param): |
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return "%s_%s" %( |
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testcase_func.__name__, |
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parameterized.to_safe_name("_".join(str(x) for x in param.args)), |
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) |
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class AddTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
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@parameterized.expand([ |
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(2, 3, 5), |
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(2, 3, 5), |
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], name_func=custom_name_func) |
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def test_add(self, a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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Will create the test cases:: |
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$ nosetests example.py |
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test_add_1_2_3 (example.AddTestCase) ... ok |
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test_add_2_3_5 (example.AddTestCase) ... ok |
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---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ran 2 tests in 0.001s |
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OK |
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The ``param(...)`` helper class stores the parameters for one specific test |
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case. It can be used to pass keyword arguments to test cases: |
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.. code:: python |
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from parameterized import parameterized, param |
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@parameterized([ |
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param("10", 10), |
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param("10", 16, base=16), |
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]) |
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def test_int(str_val, expected, base=10): |
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assert_equal(int(str_val, base=base), expected) |
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If test cases have a docstring, the parameters for that test case will be |
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appended to the first line of the docstring. This behavior can be controlled |
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with the ``doc_func`` argument: |
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.. code:: python |
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from parameterized import parameterized |
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@parameterized([ |
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(1, 2, 3), |
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(4, 5, 9), |
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]) |
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def test_add(a, b, expected): |
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""" Test addition. """ |
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assert_equal(a + b, expected) |
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def my_doc_func(func, num, param): |
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return "%s: %s with %s" %(num, func.__name__, param) |
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@parameterized([ |
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(5, 4, 1), |
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(9, 6, 3), |
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], doc_func=my_doc_func) |
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def test_subtraction(a, b, expected): |
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assert_equal(a - b, expected) |
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:: |
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$ nosetests example.py |
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Test addition. [with a=1, b=2, expected=3] ... ok |
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Test addition. [with a=4, b=5, expected=9] ... ok |
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0: test_subtraction with param(*(5, 4, 1)) ... ok |
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1: test_subtraction with param(*(9, 6, 3)) ... ok |
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---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ran 4 tests in 0.001s |
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OK |
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Finally ``@parameterized_class`` parameterizes an entire class, using |
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either a list of attributes, or a list of dicts that will be applied to the |
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class: |
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.. code:: python |
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from yourapp.models import User |
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from parameterized import parameterized_class |
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@parameterized_class([ |
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{ "username": "user_1", "access_level": 1 }, |
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{ "username": "user_2", "access_level": 2, "expected_status_code": 404 }, |
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]) |
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class TestUserAccessLevel(TestCase): |
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expected_status_code = 200 |
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def setUp(self): |
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self.client.force_login(User.objects.get(username=self.username)[0]) |
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def test_url_a(self): |
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response = self.client.get('/url') |
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self.assertEqual(response.status_code, self.expected_status_code) |
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|
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def tearDown(self): |
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self.client.logout() |
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|
|
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|
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@parameterized_class(("username", "access_level", "expected_status_code"), [ |
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|
("user_1", 1, 200), |
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|
("user_2", 2, 404) |
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|
]) |
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|
class TestUserAccessLevel(TestCase): |
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|
def setUp(self): |
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|
self.client.force_login(User.objects.get(username=self.username)[0]) |
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|
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|
def test_url_a(self): |
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|
response = self.client.get("/url") |
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|
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, self.expected_status_code) |
|
|
|
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|
def tearDown(self): |
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|
self.client.logout() |
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|
|
|
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|
|
|
The ``@parameterized_class`` decorator accepts a ``class_name_func`` argument, |
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|
which controls the name of the parameterized classes generated by |
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|
``@parameterized_class``: |
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|
|
|
|
.. code:: python |
|
|
|
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|
from parameterized import parameterized, parameterized_class |
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|
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|
def get_class_name(cls, num, params_dict): |
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|
# By default the generated class named includes either the "name" |
|
|
# parameter (if present), or the first string value. This example shows |
|
|
# multiple parameters being included in the generated class name: |
|
|
return "%s_%s_%s%s" %( |
|
|
cls.__name__, |
|
|
num, |
|
|
parameterized.to_safe_name(params_dict['a']), |
|
|
parameterized.to_safe_name(params_dict['b']), |
|
|
) |
|
|
|
|
|
@parameterized_class([ |
|
|
{ "a": "hello", "b": " world!", "expected": "hello world!" }, |
|
|
{ "a": "say ", "b": " cheese :)", "expected": "say cheese :)" }, |
|
|
], class_name_func=get_class_name) |
|
|
class TestConcatenation(TestCase): |
|
|
def test_concat(self): |
|
|
self.assertEqual(self.a + self.b, self.expected) |
|
|
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
|
|
$ nosetests -v test_math.py |
|
|
test_concat (test_concat.TestConcatenation_0_hello_world_) ... ok |
|
|
test_concat (test_concat.TestConcatenation_0_say_cheese__) ... ok |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Using with Single Parameters |
|
|
............................ |
|
|
|
|
|
If a test function only accepts one parameter and the value is not iterable, |
|
|
then it is possible to supply a list of values without wrapping each one in a |
|
|
tuple: |
|
|
|
|
|
.. code:: python |
|
|
|
|
|
@parameterized([1, 2, 3]) |
|
|
def test_greater_than_zero(value): |
|
|
assert value > 0 |
|
|
|
|
|
Note, however, that if the single parameter *is* iterable (such as a list or |
|
|
tuple), then it *must* be wrapped in a tuple, list, or the ``param(...)`` |
|
|
helper: |
|
|
|
|
|
.. code:: python |
|
|
|
|
|
@parameterized([ |
|
|
([1, 2, 3], ), |
|
|
([3, 3], ), |
|
|
([6], ), |
|
|
]) |
|
|
def test_sums_to_6(numbers): |
|
|
assert sum(numbers) == 6 |
|
|
|
|
|
(note, also, that Python requires single element tuples to be defined with a |
|
|
trailing comma: ``(foo, )``) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Using with ``@mock.patch`` |
|
|
.......................... |
|
|
|
|
|
``parameterized`` can be used with ``mock.patch``, but the argument ordering |
|
|
can be confusing. The ``@mock.patch(...)`` decorator must come *below* the |
|
|
``@parameterized(...)``, and the mocked parameters must come *last*: |
|
|
|
|
|
.. code:: python |
|
|
|
|
|
@mock.patch("os.getpid") |
|
|
class TestOS(object): |
|
|
@parameterized(...) |
|
|
@mock.patch("os.fdopen") |
|
|
@mock.patch("os.umask") |
|
|
def test_method(self, param1, param2, ..., mock_umask, mock_fdopen, mock_getpid): |
|
|
... |
|
|
|
|
|
Note: the same holds true when using ``@parameterized.expand``. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Migrating from ``nose-parameterized`` to ``parameterized`` |
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
|
|
To migrate a codebase from ``nose-parameterized`` to ``parameterized``: |
|
|
|
|
|
1. Update your requirements file, replacing ``nose-parameterized`` with |
|
|
``parameterized``. |
|
|
|
|
|
2. Replace all references to ``nose_parameterized`` with ``parameterized``:: |
|
|
|
|
|
$ perl -pi -e 's/nose_parameterized/parameterized/g' your-codebase/ |
|
|
|
|
|
3. You're done! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FAQ |
|
|
--- |
|
|
|
|
|
What happened to Python 2.X, 3.5, and 3.6 support? |
|
|
As of version 0.9.0, ``parameterized`` no longer supports Python 2.X, 3.5, |
|
|
or 3.6. Previous versions of ``parameterized`` - 0.8.1 being the latest - |
|
|
will continue to work, but will not receive any new features or bug fixes. |
|
|
|
|
|
What do you mean when you say "nose is best supported"? |
|
|
There are small caveates with ``py.test`` and ``unittest``: ``py.test`` |
|
|
does not show the parameter values (ex, it will show ``test_add[0]`` |
|
|
instead of ``test_add[1, 2, 3]``), and ``unittest``/``unittest2`` do not |
|
|
support test generators so ``@parameterized.expand`` must be used. |
|
|
|
|
|
Why not use ``@pytest.mark.parametrize``? |
|
|
Because spelling is difficult. Also, ``parameterized`` doesn't require you |
|
|
to repeat argument names, and (using ``param``) it supports optional |
|
|
keyword arguments. |
|
|
|
|
|
Why do I get an ``AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute 'expand'`` with ``@parameterized.expand``? |
|
|
You've likely installed the ``parametrized`` (note the missing *e*) |
|
|
package. Use ``parameterized`` (with the *e*) instead and you'll be all |
|
|
set. |
|
|
|
|
|
What happened to ``nose-parameterized``? |
|
|
Originally only nose was supported. But now everything is supported, and it |
|
|
only made sense to change the name! |
|
|
|