Staging
v0.5.1
v0.5.1
https://github.com/python/cpython
Tip revision: 1da43e5e916949c8e849e656d9d05fa4b9d6836c authored by Benjamin Peterson on 26 June 2009, 13:21:52 UTC
rearrange the sections of the README, so they'll hopefully be more in the order people will interested in
rearrange the sections of the README, so they'll hopefully be more in the order people will interested in
Tip revision: 1da43e5
test_userstring.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
# UserString is a wrapper around the native builtin string type.
# UserString instances should behave similar to builtin string objects.
import string
from test import support, string_tests
from collections import UserString
class UserStringTest(
string_tests.CommonTest,
string_tests.MixinStrUnicodeUserStringTest,
):
type2test = UserString
# Overwrite the three testing methods, because UserString
# can't cope with arguments propagated to UserString
# (and we don't test with subclasses)
def checkequal(self, result, object, methodname, *args):
result = self.fixtype(result)
object = self.fixtype(object)
# we don't fix the arguments, because UserString can't cope with it
realresult = getattr(object, methodname)(*args)
self.assertEqual(
result,
realresult
)
def checkraises(self, exc, object, methodname, *args):
object = self.fixtype(object)
# we don't fix the arguments, because UserString can't cope with it
self.assertRaises(
exc,
getattr(object, methodname),
*args
)
def checkcall(self, object, methodname, *args):
object = self.fixtype(object)
# we don't fix the arguments, because UserString can't cope with it
getattr(object, methodname)(*args)
def test_main():
support.run_unittest(UserStringTest)
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_main()