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d19109fd37
Thanks Tim Graham for the review and suggestions.
82 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
82 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
===================
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Django and doctests
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===================
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Doctests use Python's standard :mod:`doctest` module, which searches your
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docstrings for statements that resemble a session of the Python interactive
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interpreter. A full explanation of how :mod:`doctest` works is out of the scope
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of this document; read Python's official documentation for the details.
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.. admonition:: What's a **docstring**?
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A good explanation of docstrings (and some guidelines for using them
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effectively) can be found in :pep:`257`:
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A docstring is a string literal that occurs as the first statement in
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a module, function, class, or method definition. Such a docstring
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becomes the ``__doc__`` special attribute of that object.
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For example, this function has a docstring that describes what it does::
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def add_two(num):
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"Return the result of adding two to the provided number."
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return num + 2
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Because tests often make great documentation, putting tests directly in
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your docstrings is an effective way to document *and* test your code.
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As with unit tests, for a given Django application, the test runner looks for
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doctests in two places:
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* The ``models.py`` file. You can define module-level doctests and/or a
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doctest for individual models. It's common practice to put
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application-level doctests in the module docstring and model-level
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doctests in the model docstrings.
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* A file called ``tests.py`` in the application directory -- i.e., the
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directory that holds ``models.py``. This file is a hook for any and all
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doctests you want to write that aren't necessarily related to models.
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This example doctest is equivalent to the example given in the unittest section
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above::
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# models.py
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from django.db import models
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class Animal(models.Model):
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"""
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An animal that knows how to make noise
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# Create some animals
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>>> lion = Animal.objects.create(name="lion", sound="roar")
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>>> cat = Animal.objects.create(name="cat", sound="meow")
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# Make 'em speak
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>>> lion.speak()
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'The lion says "roar"'
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>>> cat.speak()
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'The cat says "meow"'
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"""
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name = models.CharField(max_length=20)
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sound = models.CharField(max_length=20)
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def speak(self):
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return 'The %s says "%s"' % (self.name, self.sound)
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When you :ref:`run your tests <running-tests>`, the test runner will find this
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docstring, notice that portions of it look like an interactive Python session,
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and execute those lines while checking that the results match.
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In the case of model tests, note that the test runner takes care of creating
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its own test database. That is, any test that accesses a database -- by
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creating and saving model instances, for example -- will not affect your
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production database. However, the database is not refreshed between doctests,
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so if your doctest requires a certain state you should consider flushing the
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database or loading a fixture. (See the section on :ref:`fixtures
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<topics-testing-fixtures>` for more on this.) Note that to use this feature,
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the database user Django is connecting as must have ``CREATE DATABASE``
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rights.
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For more details about :mod:`doctest`, see the Python documentation.
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