##// END OF EJS Templates
Renamed to inputsplitter, added more tests and examples....
Renamed to inputsplitter, added more tests and examples. All items from code review are now in. Still need to finish the special syntax and it will be ready for trunk.

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test_inputsplitter.py
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/ IPython / core / tests / test_inputsplitter.py
"""Tests for the inputsplitter module.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2010 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.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# stdlib
import unittest
# Third party
import nose.tools as nt
# Our own
from IPython.core import inputsplitter as isp
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Semi-complete examples (also used as tests)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def mini_interactive_loop(raw_input):
"""Minimal example of the logic of an interactive interpreter loop.
This serves as an example, and it is used by the test system with a fake
raw_input that simulates interactive input."""
from IPython.core.inputsplitter import InputSplitter
isp = InputSplitter()
# In practice, this input loop would be wrapped in an outside loop to read
# input indefinitely, until some exit/quit command was issued. Here we
# only illustrate the basic inner loop.
while isp.push_accepts_more():
indent = ' '*isp.indent_spaces
prompt = '>>> ' + indent
line = indent + raw_input(prompt)
isp.push(line)
# Here we just return input so we can use it in a test suite, but a real
# interpreter would instead send it for execution somewhere.
src = isp.source_reset()
print 'Input source was:\n', src
return src
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Test utilities, just for local use
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def assemble(block):
"""Assemble a block into multi-line sub-blocks."""
return ['\n'.join(sub_block)+'\n' for sub_block in block]
def pseudo_input(lines):
"""Return a function that acts like raw_input but feeds the input list."""
ilines = iter(lines)
def raw_in(prompt):
try:
return next(ilines)
except StopIteration:
return ''
return raw_in
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Tests
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def test_spaces():
tests = [('', 0),
(' ', 1),
('\n', 0),
(' \n', 1),
('x', 0),
(' x', 1),
(' x',2),
(' x',4),
# Note: tabs are counted as a single whitespace!
('\tx', 1),
('\t x', 2),
]
for s, nsp in tests:
nt.assert_equal(isp.num_ini_spaces(s), nsp)
def test_remove_comments():
tests = [('text', 'text'),
('text # comment', 'text '),
('text # comment\n', 'text \n'),
('text # comment \n', 'text \n'),
('line # c \nline\n','line \nline\n'),
('line # c \nline#c2 \nline\nline #c\n\n',
'line \nline\nline\nline \n\n'),
]
for inp, out in tests:
nt.assert_equal(isp.remove_comments(inp), out)
def test_get_input_encoding():
encoding = isp.get_input_encoding()
nt.assert_true(isinstance(encoding, basestring))
# simple-minded check that at least encoding a simple string works with the
# encoding we got.
nt.assert_equal('test'.encode(encoding), 'test')
class InputSplitterTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.isp = isp.InputSplitter()
def test_reset(self):
isp = self.isp
isp.push('x=1')
isp.reset()
self.assertEqual(isp._buffer, [])
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 0)
self.assertEqual(isp.source, '')
self.assertEqual(isp.code, None)
self.assertEqual(isp._is_complete, False)
def test_source(self):
self.isp._store('1')
self.isp._store('2')
self.assertEqual(self.isp.source, '1\n2\n')
self.assertTrue(len(self.isp._buffer)>0)
self.assertEqual(self.isp.source_reset(), '1\n2\n')
self.assertEqual(self.isp._buffer, [])
self.assertEqual(self.isp.source, '')
def test_indent(self):
isp = self.isp # shorthand
isp.push('x=1')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 0)
isp.push('if 1:\n x=1')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
isp.push('y=2\n')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 0)
isp.push('if 1:')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
isp.push(' x=1')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
# Blank lines shouldn't change the indent level
isp.push(' '*2)
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
def test_indent2(self):
isp = self.isp
# When a multiline statement contains parens or multiline strings, we
# shouldn't get confused.
isp.push("if 1:")
isp.push(" x = (1+\n 2)")
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
def test_dedent(self):
isp = self.isp # shorthand
isp.push('if 1:')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 4)
isp.push(' pass')
self.assertEqual(isp.indent_spaces, 0)
def test_push(self):
isp = self.isp
self.assertTrue(isp.push('x=1'))
def test_push2(self):
isp = self.isp
self.assertFalse(isp.push('if 1:'))
for line in [' x=1', '# a comment', ' y=2']:
self.assertTrue(isp.push(line))
def test_push3(self):
"""Test input with leading whitespace"""
isp = self.isp
isp.push(' x=1')
isp.push(' y=2')
self.assertEqual(isp.source, 'if 1:\n x=1\n y=2\n')
def test_replace_mode(self):
isp = self.isp
isp.input_mode = 'replace'
isp.push('x=1')
self.assertEqual(isp.source, 'x=1\n')
isp.push('x=2')
self.assertEqual(isp.source, 'x=2\n')
def test_push_accepts_more(self):
isp = self.isp
isp.push('x=1')
self.assertFalse(isp.push_accepts_more())
def test_push_accepts_more2(self):
isp = self.isp
isp.push('if 1:')
self.assertTrue(isp.push_accepts_more())
isp.push(' x=1')
self.assertTrue(isp.push_accepts_more())
isp.push('')
self.assertFalse(isp.push_accepts_more())
def test_push_accepts_more3(self):
isp = self.isp
isp.push("x = (2+\n3)")
self.assertFalse(isp.push_accepts_more())
def test_push_accepts_more4(self):
isp = self.isp
# When a multiline statement contains parens or multiline strings, we
# shouldn't get confused.
# FIXME: we should be able to better handle de-dents in statements like
# multiline strings and multiline expressions (continued with \ or
# parens). Right now we aren't handling the indentation tracking quite
# correctly with this, though in practice it may not be too much of a
# problem. We'll need to see.
isp.push("if 1:")
isp.push(" x = (2+")
isp.push(" 3)")
self.assertTrue(isp.push_accepts_more())
isp.push(" y = 3")
self.assertTrue(isp.push_accepts_more())
isp.push('')
self.assertFalse(isp.push_accepts_more())
def test_syntax_error(self):
isp = self.isp
# Syntax errors immediately produce a 'ready' block, so the invalid
# Python can be sent to the kernel for evaluation with possible ipython
# special-syntax conversion.
isp.push('run foo')
self.assertFalse(isp.push_accepts_more())
def check_split(self, block_lines, compile=True):
blocks = assemble(block_lines)
lines = ''.join(blocks)
oblock = self.isp.split_blocks(lines)
self.assertEqual(oblock, blocks)
if compile:
for block in blocks:
self.isp._compile(block)
def test_split(self):
# All blocks of input we want to test in a list. The format for each
# block is a list of lists, with each inner lists consisting of all the
# lines (as single-lines) that should make up a sub-block.
# Note: do NOT put here sub-blocks that don't compile, as the
# check_split() routine makes a final verification pass to check that
# each sub_block, as returned by split_blocks(), does compile
# correctly.
all_blocks = [ [['x=1']],
[['x=1'],
['y=2']],
[['x=1'],
['# a comment'],
['y=11']],
[['if 1:',
' x=1'],
['y=3']],
[['def f(x):',
' return x'],
['x=1']],
[['def f(x):',
' x+=1',
' ',
' return x'],
['x=1']],
[['def f(x):',
' if x>0:',
' y=1',
' # a comment',
' else:',
' y=4',
' ',
' return y'],
['x=1'],
['if 1:',
' y=11'] ],
[['for i in range(10):'
' x=i**2']],
[['for i in range(10):'
' x=i**2'],
['z = 1']],
]
for block_lines in all_blocks:
self.check_split(block_lines)
def test_split_syntax_errors(self):
# Block splitting with invalid syntax
all_blocks = [ [['a syntax error']],
[['x=1'],
['a syntax error']],
[['for i in range(10):'
' an error']],
]
for block_lines in all_blocks:
self.check_split(block_lines, compile=False)
class InteractiveLoopTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
"""Tests for an interactive loop like a python shell.
"""
def check_ns(self, lines, ns):
"""Validate that the given input lines produce the resulting namespace.
Note: the input lines are given exactly as they would be typed in an
auto-indenting environment, as mini_interactive_loop above already does
auto-indenting and prepends spaces to the input.
"""
src = mini_interactive_loop(pseudo_input(lines))
test_ns = {}
exec src in test_ns
# We can't check that the provided ns is identical to the test_ns,
# because Python fills test_ns with extra keys (copyright, etc). But
# we can check that the given dict is *contained* in test_ns
for k,v in ns.items():
self.assertEqual(test_ns[k], v)
def test_simple(self):
self.check_ns(['x=1'], dict(x=1))
def test_simple2(self):
self.check_ns(['if 1:', 'x=2'], dict(x=2))
def test_xy(self):
self.check_ns(['x=1; y=2'], dict(x=1, y=2))
def test_abc(self):
self.check_ns(['if 1:','a=1','b=2','c=3'], dict(a=1, b=2, c=3))
def test_multi(self):
self.check_ns(['x =(1+','1+','2)'], dict(x=4))