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Statically type OInfo....
Statically type OInfo. In view of working with #13860, some cleanup inspect to be properly typed, and using stricter datastructure. Instead of dict we now use dataclasses, this will make sure that fields type and access can be stricter and verified not only at runtime, but by mypy

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test_hooks.py
76 lines | 2.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Tests for CommandChainDispatcher."""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import pytest
from IPython.core.error import TryNext
from IPython.core.hooks import CommandChainDispatcher
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Local utilities
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Define two classes, one which succeeds and one which raises TryNext. Each
# sets the attribute `called` to True when it is called.
class Okay(object):
def __init__(self, message):
self.message = message
self.called = False
def __call__(self):
self.called = True
return self.message
class Fail(object):
def __init__(self, message):
self.message = message
self.called = False
def __call__(self):
self.called = True
raise TryNext(self.message)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def test_command_chain_dispatcher_ff():
"""Test two failing hooks"""
fail1 = Fail("fail1")
fail2 = Fail("fail2")
dp = CommandChainDispatcher([(0, fail1), (10, fail2)])
with pytest.raises(TryNext) as e:
dp()
assert str(e.value) == "fail2"
assert fail1.called is True
assert fail2.called is True
def test_command_chain_dispatcher_fofo():
"""Test a mixture of failing and succeeding hooks."""
fail1 = Fail("fail1")
fail2 = Fail("fail2")
okay1 = Okay("okay1")
okay2 = Okay("okay2")
dp = CommandChainDispatcher([(0, fail1),
# (5, okay1), # add this later
(10, fail2),
(15, okay2)])
dp.add(okay1, 5)
assert dp() == "okay1"
assert fail1.called is True
assert okay1.called is True
assert fail2.called is False
assert okay2.called is False
def test_command_chain_dispatcher_eq_priority():
okay1 = Okay(u'okay1')
okay2 = Okay(u'okay2')
dp = CommandChainDispatcher([(1, okay1)])
dp.add(okay2, 1)