Giter VIP home page Giter VIP logo

python-precisely's Introduction

Precisely: better assertions for Python tests

Precisely allows you to write precise assertions so you only test the behaviour you're really interested in. This makes it clearer to the reader what the expected behaviour is, and makes tests less brittle. This also allows better error messages to be generated when assertions fail. Inspired by Hamcrest.

For instance, suppose we want to make sure that a unique function removes duplicates from a list. We might write a test like so:

from precisely import assert_that, contains_exactly

def test_unique_removes_duplicates():
    result = unique(["a", "a", "b", "a", "b"])
    assert_that(result, contains_exactly("a", "b"))

The assertion will pass so long as result contains "a" and "b" in any order, but no other items. Unlike, say, assert result == ["a", "b"], our assertion ignores the ordering of elements. This is useful when:

  • the ordering of the result is non-determistic, such as when using set.
  • the ordering isn't specified in the contract of unique. If we assert a particular ordering, then we'd be testing the implementation rather than the contract.
  • the ordering is specified in the contract of unique, but the ordering is tested in a separate test case.

When the assertion fails, rather than just stating the two values weren't equal, the error message will describe the failure in more detail. For instance, if unique has the value ["a", "a", "b"], we'd get the failure message:

Expected: iterable containing in any order:
  * 'a'
  * 'b'
but: had extra elements:
  * 'a'

Installation

pip install precisely

API

Use assert_that(value, matcher) to assert that a value satisfies a matcher.

Many matchers are composed of other matchers. If they are given a value instead of a matcher, then that value is wrapped in equal_to(). For instance, has_attrs(name="bob") is equivalent to has_attrs(name=equal_to("bob")).

  • equal_to(value): matches a value if it is equal to value using ==.
  • has_attrs(**kwargs): matches a value if it has the specified attributes. For instance:

    assert_that(result, has_attrs(id=is_a(int), name="bob"))
  • contains_exactly(*args): matches an iterable if it has the same elements in any order. For instance:

    assert_that(result, contains_exactly("a", "b"))
    # Matches ["a", "b"] and ["b", "a"],
    # but not ["a", "a", "b"] nor ["a"] nor ["a", "b", "c"]
  • is_sequence(*args): matches an iterable if it has the same elements in the same order. For instance:

    assert_that(result, is_sequence("a", "b"))
    # Matches ["a", "b"] but not ["b", "a"]
  • includes(*args): matches an iterable if it includes all of the elements. For instance:

    assert_that(result, includes("a", "b"))
    # Matches ["a", "b"], ["b", "a"] and ["a", "c", "b"]
    # but not ["a", "c"] nor ["a"]
  • all_elements(matcher): matches an iterable if every element matches matcher. For instance:

    assert_that(result, all_elements(equal_to(42)))
    # Matches [42], [42, 42, 42] and []
    # but not [42, 43]
  • is_mapping(matchers): matches a mapping, such as a dict, if it has the same keys with matching values. An error will be raised if the mapping is missing any keys, or has any extra keys. For instance:

    assert_that(result, is_mapping({
        "a": equal_to(1),
        "b": equal_to(4),
    }))
  • anything: matches all values.
  • is_instance(type): matches any value where isinstance(value, type).
  • all_of(*matchers): matchers a value if all sub-matchers match. For instance:

    assert_that(result, all_of(
        is_instance(User),
        has_attrs(name="bob"),
    ))
  • any_of(*matchers): matchers a value if any sub-matcher matches. For instance:

    assert_that(result, any_of(
        equal_to("x=1, y=2"),
        equal_to("y=2, x=1"),
    ))
  • not_(matcher): negates a matcher. For instance:

    assert_that(result, not_(equal_to("hello")))
  • starts_with(prefix): matches a string if it starts with prefix.
  • contains_string(substring): matches a string if it contains substring.
  • greater_than(value): matches values greater than value.
  • greater_than_or_equal_to(value): matches values greater than or equal to value.
  • less_than(value): matches values less than value.
  • less_than_or_equal_to(value): matches values less than or equal to value.
  • close_to(value, delta): matches values close to value within a tolerance of +/- delta.
  • has_feature(name, extract, matcher): matches value if extract(value) matches matcher. For instance:

    assert_that(result, has_feature("len", len, equal_to(2)))

    For clarity, it often helps to extract the use of has_feature into its own function:

    def has_len(matcher):
        return has_feature("len", len, matcher)
    
    assert_that(result, has_len(equal_to(2)))
  • raises(matcher): matches value if value() raises an exception matched by matcher. For instance:

    assert_that(lambda: func("arg"), raises(is_instance(ValueError)))

Alternatives

PyHamcrest is another Python implemention of matchers. I prefer the error messages that this project produces, but feel free to judge for yourself:

# Precisely
from precisely import assert_that, is_sequence, has_attrs

assert_that(
    [
        User("bob", "[email protected]"),
        User("jim", "[email protected]"),
    ],
    is_sequence(
        has_attrs(username="bob", email_address="[email protected]"),
        has_attrs(username="jim", email_address="[email protected]"),
    )
)

# Expected: iterable containing in order:
#   0: attributes:
#     * username: 'bob'
#     * email_address: '[email protected]'
#   1: attributes:
#     * username: 'jim'
#     * email_address: '[email protected]'
# but: element at index 0 mismatched:
#   * attribute email_address: was '[email protected]'

# Hamcrest
from hamcrest import assert_that, contains, has_properties

assert_that(
    [
        User("bob", "[email protected]"),
        User("jim", "[email protected]"),
    ],
    contains(
        has_properties(username="bob", email_address="[email protected]"),
        has_properties(username="jim", email_address="[email protected]"),
    )
)

# Hamcrest error:
# Expected: a sequence containing [(an object with a property 'username' matching 'bob' and an object with a property 'email_address' matching '[email protected]'), (an object with a property 'username' matching 'jim' and an object with a property 'email_address' matching '[email protected]')]
#      but: item 0: an object with a property 'email_address' matching '[email protected]' property 'email_address' was '[email protected]'

python-precisely's People

Contributors

danodonovan avatar mwilliamson avatar mwilliamson-healx avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.