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\section{\module{doctest} ---
Test interactive Python examples}
\declaremodule{standard}{doctest}
\moduleauthor{Tim Peters}{tim@python.org}
\sectionauthor{Tim Peters}{tim@python.org}
\sectionauthor{Moshe Zadka}{moshez@debian.org}
\sectionauthor{Edward Loper}{edloper@users.sourceforge.net}
\modulesynopsis{A framework for verifying interactive Python examples.}
The \refmodule{doctest} module searches for pieces of text that look like
interactive Python sessions, and then executes those sessions to
verify that they work exactly as shown. There are several common ways to
use doctest:
\begin{itemize}
\item To check that a module's docstrings are up-to-date by verifying
that all interactive examples still work as documented.
\item To perform regression testing by verifying that interactive
examples from a test file or a test object work as expected.
\item To write tutorial documentation for a package, liberally
illustrated with input-output examples. Depending on whether
the examples or the expository text are emphasized, this has
the flavor of "literate testing" or "executable documentation".
\end{itemize}
Here's a complete but small example module:
\begin{verbatim}
"""
This is the "example" module.
The example module supplies one function, factorial(). For example,
>>> factorial(5)
120
"""
def factorial(n):
"""Return the factorial of n, an exact integer >= 0.
If the result is small enough to fit in an int, return an int.
Else return a long.
>>> [factorial(n) for n in range(6)]
[1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
>>> [factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)]
[1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
>>> factorial(30)
265252859812191058636308480000000L
>>> factorial(30L)
265252859812191058636308480000000L
>>> factorial(-1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: n must be >= 0
Factorials of floats are OK, but the float must be an exact integer:
>>> factorial(30.1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: n must be exact integer
>>> factorial(30.0)
265252859812191058636308480000000L
It must also not be ridiculously large:
>>> factorial(1e100)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
OverflowError: n too large
"""
\end{verbatim}
% allow LaTeX to break here.
\begin{verbatim}
import math
if not n >= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be >= 0")
if math.floor(n) != n:
raise ValueError("n must be exact integer")
if n+1 == n: # catch a value like 1e300
raise OverflowError("n too large")
result = 1
factor = 2
while factor <= n:
result *= factor
factor += 1
return result
def _test():
import doctest
doctest.testmod()
if __name__ == "__main__":
_test()
\end{verbatim}
If you run \file{example.py} directly from the command line,
\refmodule{doctest} works its magic:
\begin{verbatim}
$ python example.py
$
\end{verbatim}
There's no output! That's normal, and it means all the examples
worked. Pass \programopt{-v} to the script, and \refmodule{doctest}
prints a detailed log of what it's trying, and prints a summary at the
end:
\begin{verbatim}
$ python example.py -v
Trying:
factorial(5)
Expecting:
120
ok
Trying:
[factorial(n) for n in range(6)]
Expecting:
[1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
ok
Trying:
[factorial(long(n)) for n in range(6)]
Expecting:
[1, 1, 2, 6, 24, 120]
ok
\end{verbatim}
And so on, eventually ending with:
\begin{verbatim}
Trying:
factorial(1e100)
Expecting:
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
OverflowError: n too large
ok
1 items had no tests:
__main__._test
2 items passed all tests:
1 tests in __main__
8 tests in __main__.factorial
9 tests in 3 items.
9 passed and 0 failed.
Test passed.
$
\end{verbatim}
That's all you need to know to start making productive use of
\refmodule{doctest}! Jump in. The following sections provide full
details. Note that there are many examples of doctests in
the standard Python test suite and libraries. Especially useful examples
can be found in the standard test file \file{Lib/test/test_doctest.py}.
\subsection{Simple Usage: Checking Examples in
Docstrings\label{doctest-simple-testmod}}
The simplest way to start using doctest (but not necessarily the way
you'll continue to do it) is to end each module \module{M} with:
\begin{verbatim}
def _test():
import doctest
doctest.testmod()
if __name__ == "__main__":
_test()
\end{verbatim}
\refmodule{doctest} then examines docstrings in module \module{M}.
Running the module as a script causes the examples in the docstrings
to get executed and verified:
\begin{verbatim}
python M.py
\end{verbatim}
This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the
failing example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout,
and the final line of output is
\samp{***Test Failed*** \var{N} failures.}, where \var{N} is the
number of examples that failed.
Run it with the \programopt{-v} switch instead:
\begin{verbatim}
python M.py -v
\end{verbatim}
and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to standard
output, along with assorted summaries at the end.
You can force verbose mode by passing \code{verbose=True} to
\function{testmod()}, or
prohibit it by passing \code{verbose=False}. In either of those cases,
\code{sys.argv} is not examined by \function{testmod()} (so passing
\programopt{-v} or not has no effect).
For more information on \function{testmod()}, see
section~\ref{doctest-basic-api}.
\subsection{Simple Usage: Checking Examples in a Text
File\label{doctest-simple-testfile}}
Another simple application of doctest is testing interactive examples
in a text file. This can be done with the \function{testfile()}
function:
\begin{verbatim}
import doctest
doctest.testfile("example.txt")
\end{verbatim}
That short script executes and verifies any interactive Python
examples contained in the file \file{example.txt}. The file content
is treated as if it were a single giant docstring; the file doesn't
need to contain a Python program! For example, perhaps \file{example.txt}
contains this:
\begin{verbatim}
The ``example`` module
======================
Using ``factorial``
-------------------
This is an example text file in reStructuredText format. First import
``factorial`` from the ``example`` module:
>>> from example import factorial
Now use it:
>>> factorial(6)
120
\end{verbatim}
Running \code{doctest.testfile("example.txt")} then finds the error
in this documentation:
\begin{verbatim}
File "./example.txt", line 14, in example.txt
Failed example:
factorial(6)
Expected:
120
Got:
720
\end{verbatim}
As with \function{testmod()}, \function{testfile()} won't display anything
unless an example fails. If an example does fail, then the failing
example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout, using
the same format as \function{testmod()}.
By default, \function{testfile()} looks for files in the calling
module's directory. See section~\ref{doctest-basic-api} for a
description of the optional arguments that can be used to tell it to
look for files in other locations.
Like \function{testmod()}, \function{testfile()}'s verbosity can be
set with the \programopt{-v} command-line switch or with the optional
keyword argument \var{verbose}.
For more information on \function{testfile()}, see
section~\ref{doctest-basic-api}.
\subsection{How It Works\label{doctest-how-it-works}}
This section examines in detail how doctest works: which docstrings it
looks at, how it finds interactive examples, what execution context it
uses, how it handles exceptions, and how option flags can be used to
control its behavior. This is the information that you need to know
to write doctest examples; for information about actually running
doctest on these examples, see the following sections.
\subsubsection{Which Docstrings Are Examined?\label{doctest-which-docstrings}}
The module docstring, and all function, class and method docstrings are
searched. Objects imported into the module are not searched.
In addition, if \code{M.__test__} exists and "is true", it must be a
dict, and each entry maps a (string) name to a function object, class
object, or string. Function and class object docstrings found from
\code{M.__test__} are searched, and strings are treated as if they
were docstrings. In output, a key \code{K} in \code{M.__test__} appears
with name
\begin{verbatim}
<name of M>.__test__.K
\end{verbatim}
Any classes found are recursively searched similarly, to test docstrings in
their contained methods and nested classes.
\versionchanged[A "private name" concept is deprecated and no longer
documented]{2.4}
\subsubsection{How are Docstring Examples
Recognized?\label{doctest-finding-examples}}
In most cases a copy-and-paste of an interactive console session works
fine, but doctest isn't trying to do an exact emulation of any specific
Python shell. All hard tab characters are expanded to spaces, using
8-column tab stops. If you don't believe tabs should mean that, too
bad: don't use hard tabs, or write your own \class{DocTestParser}
class.
\versionchanged[Expanding tabs to spaces is new; previous versions
tried to preserve hard tabs, with confusing results]{2.4}
\begin{verbatim}
>>> # comments are ignored
>>> x = 12
>>> x
12
>>> if x == 13:
... print "yes"
... else:
... print "no"
... print "NO"
... print "NO!!!"
...
no
NO
NO!!!
>>>
\end{verbatim}
Any expected output must immediately follow the final
\code{'>>>~'} or \code{'...~'} line containing the code, and
the expected output (if any) extends to the next \code{'>>>~'}
or all-whitespace line.
The fine print:
\begin{itemize}
\item Expected output cannot contain an all-whitespace line, since such a
line is taken to signal the end of expected output. If expected
output does contain a blank line, put \code{<BLANKLINE>} in your
doctest example each place a blank line is expected.
\versionchanged[\code{<BLANKLINE>} was added; there was no way to
use expected output containing empty lines in
previous versions]{2.4}
\item Output to stdout is captured, but not output to stderr (exception
tracebacks are captured via a different means).
\item If you continue a line via backslashing in an interactive session,
or for any other reason use a backslash, you should use a raw
docstring, which will preserve your backslashes exactly as you type
them:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> def f(x):
... r'''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n'''
>>> print f.__doc__
Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n
\end{verbatim}
Otherwise, the backslash will be interpreted as part of the string.
For example, the "{\textbackslash}" above would be interpreted as a
newline character. Alternatively, you can double each backslash in the
doctest version (and not use a raw string):
\begin{verbatim}
>>> def f(x):
... '''Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\\n'''
>>> print f.__doc__
Backslashes in a raw docstring: m\n
\end{verbatim}
\item The starting column doesn't matter:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> assert "Easy!"
>>> import math
>>> math.floor(1.9)
1.0
\end{verbatim}
and as many leading whitespace characters are stripped from the
expected output as appeared in the initial \code{'>>>~'} line
that started the example.
\end{itemize}
\subsubsection{What's the Execution Context?\label{doctest-execution-context}}
By default, each time \refmodule{doctest} finds a docstring to test, it
uses a \emph{shallow copy} of \module{M}'s globals, so that running tests
doesn't change the module's real globals, and so that one test in
\module{M} can't leave behind crumbs that accidentally allow another test
to work. This means examples can freely use any names defined at top-level
in \module{M}, and names defined earlier in the docstring being run.
Examples cannot see names defined in other docstrings.
You can force use of your own dict as the execution context by passing
\code{globs=your_dict} to \function{testmod()} or
\function{testfile()} instead.
\subsubsection{What About Exceptions?\label{doctest-exceptions}}
No problem, provided that the traceback is the only output produced by
the example: just paste in the traceback.\footnote{Examples containing
both expected output and an exception are not supported. Trying
to guess where one ends and the other begins is too error-prone,
and that also makes for a confusing test.}
Since tracebacks contain details that are likely to change rapidly (for
example, exact file paths and line numbers), this is one case where doctest
works hard to be flexible in what it accepts.
Simple example:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> [1, 2, 3].remove(42)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
ValueError: list.remove(x): x not in list
\end{verbatim}
That doctest succeeds if \exception{ValueError} is raised, with the
\samp{list.remove(x): x not in list} detail as shown.
The expected output for an exception must start with a traceback
header, which may be either of the following two lines, indented the
same as the first line of the example:
\begin{verbatim}
Traceback (most recent call last):
Traceback (innermost last):
\end{verbatim}
The traceback header is followed by an optional traceback stack, whose
contents are ignored by doctest. The traceback stack is typically
omitted, or copied verbatim from an interactive session.
The traceback stack is followed by the most interesting part: the
line(s) containing the exception type and detail. This is usually the
last line of a traceback, but can extend across multiple lines if the
exception has a multi-line detail:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> raise ValueError('multi\n line\ndetail')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
ValueError: multi
line
detail
\end{verbatim}
The last three lines (starting with \exception{ValueError}) are
compared against the exception's type and detail, and the rest are
ignored.
Best practice is to omit the traceback stack, unless it adds
significant documentation value to the example. So the last example
is probably better as:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> raise ValueError('multi\n line\ndetail')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: multi
line
detail
\end{verbatim}
Note that tracebacks are treated very specially. In particular, in the
rewritten example, the use of \samp{...} is independent of doctest's
\constant{ELLIPSIS} option. The ellipsis in that example could be left
out, or could just as well be three (or three hundred) commas or digits,
or an indented transcript of a Monty Python skit.
Some details you should read once, but won't need to remember:
\begin{itemize}
\item Doctest can't guess whether your expected output came from an
exception traceback or from ordinary printing. So, e.g., an example
that expects \samp{ValueError: 42 is prime} will pass whether
\exception{ValueError} is actually raised or if the example merely
prints that traceback text. In practice, ordinary output rarely begins
with a traceback header line, so this doesn't create real problems.
\item Each line of the traceback stack (if present) must be indented
further than the first line of the example, \emph{or} start with a
non-alphanumeric character. The first line following the traceback
header indented the same and starting with an alphanumeric is taken
to be the start of the exception detail. Of course this does the
right thing for genuine tracebacks.
\item When the \constant{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL} doctest option is
is specified, everything following the leftmost colon is ignored.
\item The interactive shell omits the traceback header line for some
\exception{SyntaxError}s. But doctest uses the traceback header
line to distinguish exceptions from non-exceptions. So in the rare
case where you need to test a \exception{SyntaxError} that omits the
traceback header, you will need to manually add the traceback header
line to your test example.
\item For some \exception{SyntaxError}s, Python displays the character
position of the syntax error, using a \code{\^} marker:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> 1 1
File "<stdin>", line 1
1 1
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
\end{verbatim}
Since the lines showing the position of the error come before the
exception type and detail, they are not checked by doctest. For
example, the following test would pass, even though it puts the
\code{\^} marker in the wrong location:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> 1 1
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1
1 1
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
\end{verbatim}
\end{itemize}
\versionchanged[The ability to handle a multi-line exception detail,
and the \constant{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL} doctest option,
were added]{2.4}
\subsubsection{Option Flags and Directives\label{doctest-options}}
A number of option flags control various aspects of doctest's
behavior. Symbolic names for the flags are supplied as module constants,
which can be or'ed together and passed to various functions. The names
can also be used in doctest directives (see below).
The first group of options define test semantics, controlling
aspects of how doctest decides whether actual output matches an
example's expected output:
\begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1}
By default, if an expected output block contains just \code{1},
an actual output block containing just \code{1} or just
\code{True} is considered to be a match, and similarly for \code{0}
versus \code{False}. When \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1} is
specified, neither substitution is allowed. The default behavior
caters to that Python changed the return type of many functions
from integer to boolean; doctests expecting "little integer"
output still work in these cases. This option will probably go
away, but not for several years.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE}
By default, if an expected output block contains a line
containing only the string \code{<BLANKLINE>}, then that line
will match a blank line in the actual output. Because a
genuinely blank line delimits the expected output, this is
the only way to communicate that a blank line is expected. When
\constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE} is specified, this substitution
is not allowed.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE}
When specified, all sequences of whitespace (blanks and newlines) are
treated as equal. Any sequence of whitespace within the expected
output will match any sequence of whitespace within the actual output.
By default, whitespace must match exactly.
\constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE} is especially useful when a line
of expected output is very long, and you want to wrap it across
multiple lines in your source.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{ELLIPSIS}
When specified, an ellipsis marker (\code{...}) in the expected output
can match any substring in the actual output. This includes
substrings that span line boundaries, and empty substrings, so it's
best to keep usage of this simple. Complicated uses can lead to the
same kinds of "oops, it matched too much!" surprises that \regexp{.*}
is prone to in regular expressions.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL}
When specified, an example that expects an exception passes if
an exception of the expected type is raised, even if the exception
detail does not match. For example, an example expecting
\samp{ValueError: 42} will pass if the actual exception raised is
\samp{ValueError: 3*14}, but will fail, e.g., if
\exception{TypeError} is raised.
Note that a similar effect can be obtained using \constant{ELLIPSIS},
and \constant{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL} may go away when Python releases
prior to 2.4 become uninteresting. Until then,
\constant{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL} is the only clear way to write a
doctest that doesn't care about the exception detail yet continues
to pass under Python releases prior to 2.4 (doctest directives
appear to be comments to them). For example,
\begin{verbatim}
>>> (1, 2)[3] = 'moo' #doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
TypeError: object doesn't support item assignment
\end{verbatim}
passes under Python 2.4 and Python 2.3. The detail changed in 2.4,
to say "does not" instead of "doesn't".
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{SKIP}
When specified, do not run the example at all. This can be useful
in contexts where doctest examples serve as both documentation and
test cases, and an example should be included for documentation
purposes, but should not be checked. E.g., the example's output
might be random; or the example might depend on resources which
would be unavailable to the test driver.
The SKIP flag can also be used for temporarily "commenting out"
examples.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{COMPARISON_FLAGS}
A bitmask or'ing together all the comparison flags above.
\end{datadesc}
The second group of options controls how test failures are reported:
\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_UDIFF}
When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and
actual outputs are displayed using a unified diff.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_CDIFF}
When specified, failures that involve multi-line expected and
actual outputs will be displayed using a context diff.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_NDIFF}
When specified, differences are computed by \code{difflib.Differ},
using the same algorithm as the popular \file{ndiff.py} utility.
This is the only method that marks differences within lines as
well as across lines. For example, if a line of expected output
contains digit \code{1} where actual output contains letter \code{l},
a line is inserted with a caret marking the mismatching column
positions.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE}
When specified, display the first failing example in each doctest,
but suppress output for all remaining examples. This will prevent
doctest from reporting correct examples that break because of
earlier failures; but it might also hide incorrect examples that
fail independently of the first failure. When
\constant{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE} is specified, the remaining
examples are still run, and still count towards the total number of
failures reported; only the output is suppressed.
\end{datadesc}
\begin{datadesc}{REPORTING_FLAGS}
A bitmask or'ing together all the reporting flags above.
\end{datadesc}
"Doctest directives" may be used to modify the option flags for
individual examples. Doctest directives are expressed as a special
Python comment following an example's source code:
\begin{productionlist}[doctest]
\production{directive}
{"\#" "doctest:" \token{directive_options}}
\production{directive_options}
{\token{directive_option} ("," \token{directive_option})*}
\production{directive_option}
{\token{on_or_off} \token{directive_option_name}}
\production{on_or_off}
{"+" | "-"}
\production{directive_option_name}
{"DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE" | "NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE" | ...}
\end{productionlist}
Whitespace is not allowed between the \code{+} or \code{-} and the
directive option name. The directive option name can be any of the
option flag names explained above.
An example's doctest directives modify doctest's behavior for that
single example. Use \code{+} to enable the named behavior, or
\code{-} to disable it.
For example, this test passes:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> print range(20) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]
\end{verbatim}
Without the directive it would fail, both because the actual output
doesn't have two blanks before the single-digit list elements, and
because the actual output is on a single line. This test also passes,
and also requires a directive to do so:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> print range(20) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS
[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
\end{verbatim}
Multiple directives can be used on a single physical line, separated
by commas:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> print range(20) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS, +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
\end{verbatim}
If multiple directive comments are used for a single example, then
they are combined:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> print range(20) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]
\end{verbatim}
As the previous example shows, you can add \samp{...} lines to your
example containing only directives. This can be useful when an
example is too long for a directive to comfortably fit on the same
line:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> print range(5) + range(10,20) + range(30,40) + range(50,60)
... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
[0, ..., 4, 10, ..., 19, 30, ..., 39, 50, ..., 59]
\end{verbatim}
Note that since all options are disabled by default, and directives apply
only to the example they appear in, enabling options (via \code{+} in a
directive) is usually the only meaningful choice. However, option flags
can also be passed to functions that run doctests, establishing different
defaults. In such cases, disabling an option via \code{-} in a directive
can be useful.
\versionchanged[Constants \constant{DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE},
\constant{NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE}, \constant{ELLIPSIS},
\constant{IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL},
\constant{REPORT_UDIFF}, \constant{REPORT_CDIFF},
\constant{REPORT_NDIFF}, \constant{REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE},
\constant{COMPARISON_FLAGS} and \constant{REPORTING_FLAGS}
were added; by default \code{<BLANKLINE>} in expected output
matches an empty line in actual output; and doctest directives
were added]{2.4}
\versionchanged[Constant \constant{SKIP} was added]{2.5}
There's also a way to register new option flag names, although this
isn't useful unless you intend to extend \refmodule{doctest} internals
via subclassing:
\begin{funcdesc}{register_optionflag}{name}
Create a new option flag with a given name, and return the new
flag's integer value. \function{register_optionflag()} can be
used when subclassing \class{OutputChecker} or
\class{DocTestRunner} to create new options that are supported by
your subclasses. \function{register_optionflag} should always be
called using the following idiom:
\begin{verbatim}
MY_FLAG = register_optionflag('MY_FLAG')
\end{verbatim}
\versionadded{2.4}
\end{funcdesc}
\subsubsection{Warnings\label{doctest-warnings}}
\refmodule{doctest} is serious about requiring exact matches in expected
output. If even a single character doesn't match, the test fails. This
will probably surprise you a few times, as you learn exactly what Python
does and doesn't guarantee about output. For example, when printing a
dict, Python doesn't guarantee that the key-value pairs will be printed
in any particular order, so a test like
% Hey! What happened to Monty Python examples?
% Tim: ask Guido -- it's his example!
\begin{verbatim}
>>> foo()
{"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"}
\end{verbatim}
is vulnerable! One workaround is to do
\begin{verbatim}
>>> foo() == {"Hermione": "hippogryph", "Harry": "broomstick"}
True
\end{verbatim}
instead. Another is to do
\begin{verbatim}
>>> d = foo().items()
>>> d.sort()
>>> d
[('Harry', 'broomstick'), ('Hermione', 'hippogryph')]
\end{verbatim}
There are others, but you get the idea.
Another bad idea is to print things that embed an object address, like
\begin{verbatim}
>>> id(1.0) # certain to fail some of the time
7948648
>>> class C: pass
>>> C() # the default repr() for instances embeds an address
<__main__.C instance at 0x00AC18F0>
\end{verbatim}
The \constant{ELLIPSIS} directive gives a nice approach for the last
example:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> C() #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<__main__.C instance at 0x...>
\end{verbatim}
Floating-point numbers are also subject to small output variations across
platforms, because Python defers to the platform C library for float
formatting, and C libraries vary widely in quality here.
\begin{verbatim}
>>> 1./7 # risky
0.14285714285714285
>>> print 1./7 # safer
0.142857142857
>>> print round(1./7, 6) # much safer
0.142857
\end{verbatim}
Numbers of the form \code{I/2.**J} are safe across all platforms, and I
often contrive doctest examples to produce numbers of that form:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> 3./4 # utterly safe
0.75
\end{verbatim}
Simple fractions are also easier for people to understand, and that makes
for better documentation.
\subsection{Basic API\label{doctest-basic-api}}
The functions \function{testmod()} and \function{testfile()} provide a
simple interface to doctest that should be sufficient for most basic
uses. For a less formal introduction to these two functions, see
sections \ref{doctest-simple-testmod} and
\ref{doctest-simple-testfile}.
\begin{funcdesc}{testfile}{filename\optional{, module_relative}\optional{,
name}\optional{, package}\optional{,
globs}\optional{, verbose}\optional{,
report}\optional{, optionflags}\optional{,
extraglobs}\optional{, raise_on_error}\optional{,
parser}}
All arguments except \var{filename} are optional, and should be
specified in keyword form.
Test examples in the file named \var{filename}. Return
\samp{(\var{failure_count}, \var{test_count})}.
Optional argument \var{module_relative} specifies how the filename
should be interpreted:
\begin{itemize}
\item If \var{module_relative} is \code{True} (the default), then
\var{filename} specifies an OS-independent module-relative
path. By default, this path is relative to the calling
module's directory; but if the \var{package} argument is
specified, then it is relative to that package. To ensure
OS-independence, \var{filename} should use \code{/} characters
to separate path segments, and may not be an absolute path
(i.e., it may not begin with \code{/}).
\item If \var{module_relative} is \code{False}, then \var{filename}
specifies an OS-specific path. The path may be absolute or
relative; relative paths are resolved with respect to the
current working directory.
\end{itemize}
Optional argument \var{name} gives the name of the test; by default,
or if \code{None}, \code{os.path.basename(\var{filename})} is used.
Optional argument \var{package} is a Python package or the name of a
Python package whose directory should be used as the base directory
for a module-relative filename. If no package is specified, then
the calling module's directory is used as the base directory for
module-relative filenames. It is an error to specify \var{package}
if \var{module_relative} is \code{False}.
Optional argument \var{globs} gives a dict to be used as the globals
when executing examples. A new shallow copy of this dict is
created for the doctest, so its examples start with a clean slate.
By default, or if \code{None}, a new empty dict is used.
Optional argument \var{extraglobs} gives a dict merged into the
globals used to execute examples. This works like
\method{dict.update()}: if \var{globs} and \var{extraglobs} have a
common key, the associated value in \var{extraglobs} appears in the
combined dict. By default, or if \code{None}, no extra globals are
used. This is an advanced feature that allows parameterization of
doctests. For example, a doctest can be written for a base class, using
a generic name for the class, then reused to test any number of
subclasses by passing an \var{extraglobs} dict mapping the generic
name to the subclass to be tested.
Optional argument \var{verbose} prints lots of stuff if true, and prints
only failures if false; by default, or if \code{None}, it's true
if and only if \code{'-v'} is in \code{sys.argv}.
Optional argument \var{report} prints a summary at the end when true,
else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is
detailed, else the summary is very brief (in fact, empty if all tests
passed).
Optional argument \var{optionflags} or's together option flags. See
section~\ref{doctest-options}.
Optional argument \var{raise_on_error} defaults to false. If true,
an exception is raised upon the first failure or unexpected exception
in an example. This allows failures to be post-mortem debugged.
Default behavior is to continue running examples.
Optional argument \var{parser} specifies a \class{DocTestParser} (or
subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files. It
defaults to a normal parser (i.e., \code{\class{DocTestParser}()}).
\versionadded{2.4}
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{testmod}{\optional{m}\optional{, name}\optional{,
globs}\optional{, verbose}\optional{,
isprivate}\optional{, report}\optional{,
optionflags}\optional{, extraglobs}\optional{,
raise_on_error}\optional{, exclude_empty}}
All arguments are optional, and all except for \var{m} should be
specified in keyword form.
Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable
from module \var{m} (or module \module{__main__} if \var{m} is not
supplied or is \code{None}), starting with \code{\var{m}.__doc__}.
Also test examples reachable from dict \code{\var{m}.__test__}, if it
exists and is not \code{None}. \code{\var{m}.__test__} maps
names (strings) to functions, classes and strings; function and class
docstrings are searched for examples; strings are searched directly,
as if they were docstrings.
Only docstrings attached to objects belonging to module \var{m} are
searched.
Return \samp{(\var{failure_count}, \var{test_count})}.
Optional argument \var{name} gives the name of the module; by default,
or if \code{None}, \code{\var{m}.__name__} is used.
Optional argument \var{exclude_empty} defaults to false. If true,
objects for which no doctests are found are excluded from consideration.
The default is a backward compatibility hack, so that code still
using \method{doctest.master.summarize()} in conjunction with
\function{testmod()} continues to get output for objects with no tests.
The \var{exclude_empty} argument to the newer \class{DocTestFinder}
constructor defaults to true.
Optional arguments \var{extraglobs}, \var{verbose}, \var{report},
\var{optionflags}, \var{raise_on_error}, and \var{globs} are the same as
for function \function{testfile()} above, except that \var{globs}
defaults to \code{\var{m}.__dict__}.
Optional argument \var{isprivate} specifies a function used to
determine whether a name is private. The default function treats
all names as public. \var{isprivate} can be set to
\code{doctest.is_private} to skip over names that are
private according to Python's underscore naming convention.
\deprecated{2.4}{\var{isprivate} was a stupid idea -- don't use it.
If you need to skip tests based on name, filter the list returned by
\code{DocTestFinder.find()} instead.}
\versionchanged[The parameter \var{optionflags} was added]{2.3}
\versionchanged[The parameters \var{extraglobs}, \var{raise_on_error}
and \var{exclude_empty} were added]{2.4}
\end{funcdesc}