##// END OF EJS Templates
substitute open(...) for file(...)...
substitute open(...) for file(...) The file type is gone in py3k, and all file objects are under the new io hierarchy. Since open(...) is supported on both Python 2 and 3, use it instead of file in all instances. This isn't caught by 2to3.

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test_jsonutil.py
71 lines | 2.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Test suite for our JSON utilities.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2010-2011 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING.txt, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# stdlib
import json
# third party
import nose.tools as nt
# our own
from ..jsonutil import json_clean
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def test():
# list of input/expected output. Use None for the expected output if it
# can be the same as the input.
pairs = [(1, None), # start with scalars
(1.0, None),
('a', None),
(True, None),
(False, None),
(None, None),
# complex numbers for now just go to strings, as otherwise they
# are unserializable
(1j, '1j'),
# Containers
([1, 2], None),
((1, 2), [1, 2]),
(set([1, 2]), [1, 2]),
(dict(x=1), None),
({'x': 1, 'y':[1,2,3], '1':'int'}, None),
# More exotic objects
((x for x in range(3)), [0, 1, 2]),
(iter([1, 2]), [1, 2]),
]
for val, jval in pairs:
if jval is None:
jval = val
out = json_clean(val)
# validate our cleanup
nt.assert_equal(out, jval)
# and ensure that what we return, indeed encodes cleanly
json.loads(json.dumps(out))
def test_lambda():
jc = json_clean(lambda : 1)
nt.assert_true(jc.startswith('<function <lambda> at '))
json.dumps(jc)
def test_exception():
bad_dicts = [{1:'number', '1':'string'},
{True:'bool', 'True':'string'},
]
for d in bad_dicts:
nt.assert_raises(ValueError, json_clean, d)