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Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow....
Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow. When a module is moved to quarantine, it means that while we intend to keep it, it is currently broken or sufficiently untested that it can't be in the main IPython codebase. To be moved back into the main IPython codebase a module must: 1. Work fully. 2. Have a test suite. 3. Be a proper IPython extension and tie into the official APIs. 3. Have members of the IPython dev team who are willing to maintain it. When a module is moved to deathrow, it means that the code is either broken and not worth repairing, deprecated, replaced by newer functionality, or code that should be developed and maintained by a third party.

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tools.py
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"""Generic testing tools that do NOT depend on Twisted.
In particular, this module exposes a set of top-level assert* functions that
can be used in place of nose.tools.assert* in method generators (the ones in
nose can not, at least as of nose 0.10.4).
Note: our testing package contains testing.util, which does depend on Twisted
and provides utilities for tests that manage Deferreds. All testing support
tools that only depend on nose, IPython or the standard library should go here
instead.
Authors
-------
- Fernando Perez <Fernando.Perez@berkeley.edu>
"""
#*****************************************************************************
# Copyright (C) 2009 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#*****************************************************************************
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Required modules and packages
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import os
import sys
import nose.tools as nt
from IPython.utils import genutils
from IPython.testing import decorators as dec
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Make a bunch of nose.tools assert wrappers that can be used in test
# generators. This will expose an assert* function for each one in nose.tools.
_tpl = """
def %(name)s(*a,**kw):
return nt.%(name)s(*a,**kw)
"""
for _x in [a for a in dir(nt) if a.startswith('assert')]:
exec _tpl % dict(name=_x)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Functions and classes
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def full_path(startPath,files):
"""Make full paths for all the listed files, based on startPath.
Only the base part of startPath is kept, since this routine is typically
used with a script's __file__ variable as startPath. The base of startPath
is then prepended to all the listed files, forming the output list.
Parameters
----------
startPath : string
Initial path to use as the base for the results. This path is split
using os.path.split() and only its first component is kept.
files : string or list
One or more files.
Examples
--------
>>> full_path('/foo/bar.py',['a.txt','b.txt'])
['/foo/a.txt', '/foo/b.txt']
>>> full_path('/foo',['a.txt','b.txt'])
['/a.txt', '/b.txt']
If a single file is given, the output is still a list:
>>> full_path('/foo','a.txt')
['/a.txt']
"""
files = genutils.list_strings(files)
base = os.path.split(startPath)[0]
return [ os.path.join(base,f) for f in files ]