test_builtin.py 60.3 KB
Newer Older
1
# Python test set -- built-in functions
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2

3
import platform
4
import unittest
5
from test.test_support import fcmp, have_unicode, TESTFN, unlink, \
6
                              run_unittest, check_py3k_warnings
7
import warnings
8
from operator import neg
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
9

10
import sys, cStringIO, random, UserDict
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
11

12 13
# count the number of test runs.
# used to skip running test_execfile() multiple times
14
# and to create unique strings to intern in test_intern()
15 16
numruns = 0

17
class Squares:
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
18

19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55
    def __init__(self, max):
        self.max = max
        self.sofar = []

    def __len__(self): return len(self.sofar)

    def __getitem__(self, i):
        if not 0 <= i < self.max: raise IndexError
        n = len(self.sofar)
        while n <= i:
            self.sofar.append(n*n)
            n += 1
        return self.sofar[i]

class StrSquares:

    def __init__(self, max):
        self.max = max
        self.sofar = []

    def __len__(self):
        return len(self.sofar)

    def __getitem__(self, i):
        if not 0 <= i < self.max:
            raise IndexError
        n = len(self.sofar)
        while n <= i:
            self.sofar.append(str(n*n))
            n += 1
        return self.sofar[i]

class BitBucket:
    def write(self, line):
        pass


56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
class TestFailingBool:
    def __nonzero__(self):
        raise RuntimeError

class TestFailingIter:
    def __iter__(self):
        raise RuntimeError

64 65 66 67 68 69
class BuiltinTest(unittest.TestCase):

    def test_import(self):
        __import__('sys')
        __import__('time')
        __import__('string')
70 71
        __import__(name='sys')
        __import__(name='time', level=0)
72 73
        self.assertRaises(ImportError, __import__, 'spamspam')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, __import__, 1, 2, 3, 4)
74
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, __import__, '')
75
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, __import__, 'sys', name='sys')
76 77 78 79 80 81

    def test_abs(self):
        # int
        self.assertEqual(abs(0), 0)
        self.assertEqual(abs(1234), 1234)
        self.assertEqual(abs(-1234), 1234)
82
        self.assertTrue(abs(-sys.maxint-1) > 0)
83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92
        # float
        self.assertEqual(abs(0.0), 0.0)
        self.assertEqual(abs(3.14), 3.14)
        self.assertEqual(abs(-3.14), 3.14)
        # long
        self.assertEqual(abs(0L), 0L)
        self.assertEqual(abs(1234L), 1234L)
        self.assertEqual(abs(-1234L), 1234L)
        # str
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, abs, 'a')
93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102
        # bool
        self.assertEqual(abs(True), 1)
        self.assertEqual(abs(False), 0)
        # other
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, abs)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, abs, None)
        class AbsClass(object):
            def __abs__(self):
                return -5
        self.assertEqual(abs(AbsClass()), -5)
103

104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131
    def test_all(self):
        self.assertEqual(all([2, 4, 6]), True)
        self.assertEqual(all([2, None, 6]), False)
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, all, [2, TestFailingBool(), 6])
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, all, TestFailingIter())
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, all, 10)               # Non-iterable
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, all)                   # No args
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, all, [2, 4, 6], [])    # Too many args
        self.assertEqual(all([]), True)                     # Empty iterator
        S = [50, 60]
        self.assertEqual(all(x > 42 for x in S), True)
        S = [50, 40, 60]
        self.assertEqual(all(x > 42 for x in S), False)

    def test_any(self):
        self.assertEqual(any([None, None, None]), False)
        self.assertEqual(any([None, 4, None]), True)
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, any, [None, TestFailingBool(), 6])
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, all, TestFailingIter())
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, any, 10)               # Non-iterable
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, any)                   # No args
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, any, [2, 4, 6], [])    # Too many args
        self.assertEqual(any([]), False)                    # Empty iterator
        S = [40, 60, 30]
        self.assertEqual(any(x > 42 for x in S), True)
        S = [10, 20, 30]
        self.assertEqual(any(x > 42 for x in S), False)

132 133
    def test_neg(self):
        x = -sys.maxint-1
134
        self.assertTrue(isinstance(x, int))
135 136
        self.assertEqual(-x, sys.maxint+1)

137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163
    def test_apply(self):
        def f0(*args):
            self.assertEqual(args, ())
        def f1(a1):
            self.assertEqual(a1, 1)
        def f2(a1, a2):
            self.assertEqual(a1, 1)
            self.assertEqual(a2, 2)
        def f3(a1, a2, a3):
            self.assertEqual(a1, 1)
            self.assertEqual(a2, 2)
            self.assertEqual(a3, 3)
        apply(f0, ())
        apply(f1, (1,))
        apply(f2, (1, 2))
        apply(f3, (1, 2, 3))

        # A PyCFunction that takes only positional parameters should allow an
        # empty keyword dictionary to pass without a complaint, but raise a
        # TypeError if the dictionary is non-empty.
        apply(id, (1,), {})
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, apply, id, (1,), {"foo": 1})
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, apply)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, apply, id, 42)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, apply, id, (42,), 42)

    def test_callable(self):
164
        self.assertTrue(callable(len))
165 166 167 168
        self.assertFalse(callable("a"))
        self.assertTrue(callable(callable))
        self.assertTrue(callable(lambda x, y: x + y))
        self.assertFalse(callable(__builtins__))
169
        def f(): pass
170
        self.assertTrue(callable(f))
171 172

        class Classic:
173
            def meth(self): pass
174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196
        self.assertTrue(callable(Classic))
        c = Classic()
        self.assertTrue(callable(c.meth))
        self.assertFalse(callable(c))

        class NewStyle(object):
            def meth(self): pass
        self.assertTrue(callable(NewStyle))
        n = NewStyle()
        self.assertTrue(callable(n.meth))
        self.assertFalse(callable(n))

        # Classic and new-style classes evaluate __call__() differently
        c.__call__ = None
        self.assertTrue(callable(c))
        del c.__call__
        self.assertFalse(callable(c))
        n.__call__ = None
        self.assertFalse(callable(n))
        del n.__call__
        self.assertFalse(callable(n))

        class N2(object):
197
            def __call__(self): pass
198 199 200 201 202
        n2 = N2()
        self.assertTrue(callable(n2))
        class N3(N2): pass
        n3 = N3()
        self.assertTrue(callable(n3))
203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215

    def test_chr(self):
        self.assertEqual(chr(32), ' ')
        self.assertEqual(chr(65), 'A')
        self.assertEqual(chr(97), 'a')
        self.assertEqual(chr(0xff), '\xff')
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, chr, 256)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, chr)

    def test_cmp(self):
        self.assertEqual(cmp(-1, 1), -1)
        self.assertEqual(cmp(1, -1), 1)
        self.assertEqual(cmp(1, 1), 0)
216
        # verify that circular objects are not handled
217 218 219 220
        a = []; a.append(a)
        b = []; b.append(b)
        from UserList import UserList
        c = UserList(); c.append(c)
221 222 223 224 225
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, cmp, a, b)
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, cmp, b, c)
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, cmp, c, a)
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, cmp, a, c)
       # okay, now break the cycles
226 227 228 229
        a.pop(); b.pop(); c.pop()
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, cmp)

    def test_coerce(self):
230
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(coerce(1, 1.1), (1.0, 1.1)))
231
        self.assertEqual(coerce(1, 1L), (1L, 1L))
232
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(coerce(1L, 1.1), (1.0, 1.1)))
233 234 235 236 237
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, coerce)
        class BadNumber:
            def __coerce__(self, other):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, coerce, 42, BadNumber())
238
        self.assertRaises(OverflowError, coerce, 0.5, int("12345" * 1000))
239 240 241

    def test_compile(self):
        compile('print 1\n', '', 'exec')
242 243
        bom = '\xef\xbb\xbf'
        compile(bom + 'print 1\n', '', 'exec')
244 245 246
        compile(source='pass', filename='?', mode='exec')
        compile(dont_inherit=0, filename='tmp', source='0', mode='eval')
        compile('pass', '?', dont_inherit=1, mode='exec')
247 248 249
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, compile)
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, compile, 'print 42\n', '<string>', 'badmode')
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, compile, 'print 42\n', '<string>', 'single', 0xff)
250
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, compile, chr(0), 'f', 'exec')
251 252
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, compile, 'pass', '?', 'exec',
                          mode='eval', source='0', filename='tmp')
253 254
        if have_unicode:
            compile(unicode('print u"\xc3\xa5"\n', 'utf8'), '', 'exec')
255 256
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, compile, unichr(0), 'f', 'exec')
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, compile, unicode('a = 1'), 'f', 'bad')
257

258

259 260 261 262 263 264 265
    def test_delattr(self):
        import sys
        sys.spam = 1
        delattr(sys, 'spam')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, delattr)

    def test_dir(self):
266
        # dir(wrong number of arguments)
267 268
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, dir, 42, 42)

269 270
        # dir() - local scope
        local_var = 1
271
        self.assertIn('local_var', dir())
272 273 274

        # dir(module)
        import sys
275
        self.assertIn('exit', dir(sys))
276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284

        # dir(module_with_invalid__dict__)
        import types
        class Foo(types.ModuleType):
            __dict__ = 8
        f = Foo("foo")
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, dir, f)

        # dir(type)
285 286
        self.assertIn("strip", dir(str))
        self.assertNotIn("__mro__", dir(str))
287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294

        # dir(obj)
        class Foo(object):
            def __init__(self):
                self.x = 7
                self.y = 8
                self.z = 9
        f = Foo()
295
        self.assertIn("y", dir(f))
296 297 298 299 300

        # dir(obj_no__dict__)
        class Foo(object):
            __slots__ = []
        f = Foo()
301
        self.assertIn("__repr__", dir(f))
302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309

        # dir(obj_no__class__with__dict__)
        # (an ugly trick to cause getattr(f, "__class__") to fail)
        class Foo(object):
            __slots__ = ["__class__", "__dict__"]
            def __init__(self):
                self.bar = "wow"
        f = Foo()
310 311
        self.assertNotIn("__repr__", dir(f))
        self.assertIn("bar", dir(f))
312 313 314 315 316 317

        # dir(obj_using __dir__)
        class Foo(object):
            def __dir__(self):
                return ["kan", "ga", "roo"]
        f = Foo()
318
        self.assertTrue(dir(f) == ["ga", "kan", "roo"])
319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326

        # dir(obj__dir__not_list)
        class Foo(object):
            def __dir__(self):
                return 7
        f = Foo()
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, dir, f)

327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342
    def test_divmod(self):
        self.assertEqual(divmod(12, 7), (1, 5))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12, 7), (-2, 2))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(12, -7), (-2, -2))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12, -7), (1, -5))

        self.assertEqual(divmod(12L, 7L), (1L, 5L))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12L, 7L), (-2L, 2L))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(12L, -7L), (-2L, -2L))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12L, -7L), (1L, -5L))

        self.assertEqual(divmod(12, 7L), (1, 5L))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12, 7L), (-2, 2L))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(12L, -7), (-2L, -2))
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-12L, -7), (1L, -5))

343 344 345
        self.assertEqual(divmod(-sys.maxint-1, -1),
                         (sys.maxint+1, 0))

346 347 348 349
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(divmod(3.25, 1.0), (3.0, 0.25)))
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(divmod(-3.25, 1.0), (-4.0, 0.75)))
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(divmod(3.25, -1.0), (-4.0, -0.75)))
        self.assertTrue(not fcmp(divmod(-3.25, -1.0), (3.0, -0.25)))
350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, divmod)

    def test_eval(self):
        self.assertEqual(eval('1+1'), 2)
        self.assertEqual(eval(' 1+1\n'), 2)
        globals = {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
        locals = {'b': 200, 'c': 300}
        self.assertEqual(eval('a', globals) , 1)
        self.assertEqual(eval('a', globals, locals), 1)
        self.assertEqual(eval('b', globals, locals), 200)
        self.assertEqual(eval('c', globals, locals), 300)
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('1+1')), 2)
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode(' 1+1\n')), 2)
        globals = {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
        locals = {'b': 200, 'c': 300}
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('a'), globals), 1)
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('a'), globals, locals), 1)
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('b'), globals, locals), 200)
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('c'), globals, locals), 300)
372 373
            bom = '\xef\xbb\xbf'
            self.assertEqual(eval(bom + 'a', globals, locals), 1)
374 375
            self.assertEqual(eval(unicode('u"\xc3\xa5"', 'utf8'), globals),
                             unicode('\xc3\xa5', 'utf8'))
376 377 378
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, eval)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, eval, ())

379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397
    def test_general_eval(self):
        # Tests that general mappings can be used for the locals argument

        class M:
            "Test mapping interface versus possible calls from eval()."
            def __getitem__(self, key):
                if key == 'a':
                    return 12
                raise KeyError
            def keys(self):
                return list('xyz')

        m = M()
        g = globals()
        self.assertEqual(eval('a', g, m), 12)
        self.assertRaises(NameError, eval, 'b', g, m)
        self.assertEqual(eval('dir()', g, m), list('xyz'))
        self.assertEqual(eval('globals()', g, m), g)
        self.assertEqual(eval('locals()', g, m), m)
398
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, eval, 'a', m)
399 400 401 402 403
        class A:
            "Non-mapping"
            pass
        m = A()
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, eval, 'a', g, m)
404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429

        # Verify that dict subclasses work as well
        class D(dict):
            def __getitem__(self, key):
                if key == 'a':
                    return 12
                return dict.__getitem__(self, key)
            def keys(self):
                return list('xyz')

        d = D()
        self.assertEqual(eval('a', g, d), 12)
        self.assertRaises(NameError, eval, 'b', g, d)
        self.assertEqual(eval('dir()', g, d), list('xyz'))
        self.assertEqual(eval('globals()', g, d), g)
        self.assertEqual(eval('locals()', g, d), d)

        # Verify locals stores (used by list comps)
        eval('[locals() for i in (2,3)]', g, d)
        eval('[locals() for i in (2,3)]', g, UserDict.UserDict())

        class SpreadSheet:
            "Sample application showing nested, calculated lookups."
            _cells = {}
            def __setitem__(self, key, formula):
                self._cells[key] = formula
430
            def __getitem__(self, key):
431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438
                return eval(self._cells[key], globals(), self)

        ss = SpreadSheet()
        ss['a1'] = '5'
        ss['a2'] = 'a1*6'
        ss['a3'] = 'a2*7'
        self.assertEqual(ss['a3'], 210)

439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447
        # Verify that dir() catches a non-list returned by eval
        # SF bug #1004669
        class C:
            def __getitem__(self, item):
                raise KeyError(item)
            def keys(self):
                return 'a'
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, eval, 'dir()', globals(), C())

448 449 450 451 452 453
    # Done outside of the method test_z to get the correct scope
    z = 0
    f = open(TESTFN, 'w')
    f.write('z = z+1\n')
    f.write('z = z*2\n')
    f.close()
454 455 456
    with check_py3k_warnings(("execfile.. not supported in 3.x",
                              DeprecationWarning)):
        execfile(TESTFN)
457 458

    def test_execfile(self):
459 460 461 462
        global numruns
        if numruns:
            return
        numruns += 1
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
463

464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473
        globals = {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
        locals = {'b': 200, 'c': 300}

        self.assertEqual(self.__class__.z, 2)
        globals['z'] = 0
        execfile(TESTFN, globals)
        self.assertEqual(globals['z'], 2)
        locals['z'] = 0
        execfile(TESTFN, globals, locals)
        self.assertEqual(locals['z'], 2)
474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493

        class M:
            "Test mapping interface versus possible calls from execfile()."
            def __init__(self):
                self.z = 10
            def __getitem__(self, key):
                if key == 'z':
                    return self.z
                raise KeyError
            def __setitem__(self, key, value):
                if key == 'z':
                    self.z = value
                    return
                raise KeyError

        locals = M()
        locals['z'] = 0
        execfile(TESTFN, globals, locals)
        self.assertEqual(locals['z'], 2)

494 495
        unlink(TESTFN)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, execfile)
496
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, execfile, TESTFN, {}, ())
497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511
        import os
        self.assertRaises(IOError, execfile, os.curdir)
        self.assertRaises(IOError, execfile, "I_dont_exist")

    def test_filter(self):
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda c: 'a' <= c <= 'z', 'Hello World'), 'elloorld')
        self.assertEqual(filter(None, [1, 'hello', [], [3], '', None, 9, 0]), [1, 'hello', [3], 9])
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x > 0, [1, -3, 9, 0, 2]), [1, 9, 2])
        self.assertEqual(filter(None, Squares(10)), [1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81])
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x%2, Squares(10)), [1, 9, 25, 49, 81])
        def identity(item):
            return 1
        filter(identity, Squares(5))
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter)
        class BadSeq(object):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
512 513 514 515
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                if index<4:
                    return 42
                raise ValueError
516 517 518 519 520
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, filter, lambda x: x, BadSeq())
        def badfunc():
            pass
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, badfunc, range(5))

Walter Dörwald's avatar
Walter Dörwald committed
521
        # test bltinmodule.c::filtertuple()
522 523 524 525
        self.assertEqual(filter(None, (1, 2)), (1, 2))
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x>=3, (1, 2, 3, 4)), (3, 4))
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, 42, (1, 2))

Walter Dörwald's avatar
Walter Dörwald committed
526
        # test bltinmodule.c::filterstring()
527 528 529 530 531 532 533
        self.assertEqual(filter(None, "12"), "12")
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x>="3", "1234"), "34")
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, 42, "12")
        class badstr(str):
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, filter, lambda x: x >="3", badstr("1234"))
Walter Dörwald's avatar
Walter Dörwald committed
534

535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544
        class badstr2(str):
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                return 42
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, lambda x: x >=42, badstr2("1234"))

        class weirdstr(str):
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                return weirdstr(2*str.__getitem__(self, index))
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x>="33", weirdstr("1234")), "3344")

545 546 547 548 549
        class shiftstr(str):
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                return chr(ord(str.__getitem__(self, index))+1)
        self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x>="3", shiftstr("1234")), "345")

550
        if have_unicode:
Walter Dörwald's avatar
Walter Dörwald committed
551
            # test bltinmodule.c::filterunicode()
552 553 554 555
            self.assertEqual(filter(None, unicode("12")), unicode("12"))
            self.assertEqual(filter(lambda x: x>="3", unicode("1234")), unicode("34"))
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, 42, unicode("12"))
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, filter, lambda x: x >="3", badstr(unicode("1234")))
556

557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567
            class badunicode(unicode):
                def __getitem__(self, index):
                    return 42
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, filter, lambda x: x >=42, badunicode("1234"))

            class weirdunicode(unicode):
                def __getitem__(self, index):
                    return weirdunicode(2*unicode.__getitem__(self, index))
            self.assertEqual(
                filter(lambda x: x>=unicode("33"), weirdunicode("1234")), unicode("3344"))

568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575
            class shiftunicode(unicode):
                def __getitem__(self, index):
                    return unichr(ord(unicode.__getitem__(self, index))+1)
            self.assertEqual(
                filter(lambda x: x>=unicode("3"), shiftunicode("1234")),
                unicode("345")
            )

576
    def test_filter_subclasses(self):
577 578 579
        # test that filter() never returns tuple, str or unicode subclasses
        # and that the result always goes through __getitem__
        funcs = (None, bool, lambda x: True)
580
        class tuple2(tuple):
581 582
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                return 2*tuple.__getitem__(self, index)
583
        class str2(str):
584 585
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                return 2*str.__getitem__(self, index)
586
        inputs = {
587
            tuple2: {(): (), (1, 2, 3): (2, 4, 6)},
588
            str2:   {"": "", "123": "112233"}
589 590 591
        }
        if have_unicode:
            class unicode2(unicode):
592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600
                def __getitem__(self, index):
                    return 2*unicode.__getitem__(self, index)
            inputs[unicode2] = {
                unicode(): unicode(),
                unicode("123"): unicode("112233")
            }

        for (cls, inps) in inputs.iteritems():
            for (inp, exp) in inps.iteritems():
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
601 602 603 604 605 606 607
                # make sure the output goes through __getitem__
                # even if func is None
                self.assertEqual(
                    filter(funcs[0], cls(inp)),
                    filter(funcs[1], cls(inp))
                )
                for func in funcs:
608 609
                    outp = filter(func, cls(inp))
                    self.assertEqual(outp, exp)
610
                    self.assertTrue(not isinstance(outp, cls))
611

612 613
    def test_getattr(self):
        import sys
614
        self.assertTrue(getattr(sys, 'stdout') is sys.stdout)
615 616 617
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, getattr, sys, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, getattr, sys, 1, "foo")
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, getattr)
618 619
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertRaises(UnicodeError, getattr, sys, unichr(sys.maxunicode))
620 621 622

    def test_hasattr(self):
        import sys
623
        self.assertTrue(hasattr(sys, 'stdout'))
624 625
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, hasattr, sys, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, hasattr)
626 627
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertRaises(UnicodeError, hasattr, sys, unichr(sys.maxunicode))
628

629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638
        # Check that hasattr allows SystemExit and KeyboardInterrupts by
        class A:
            def __getattr__(self, what):
                raise KeyboardInterrupt
        self.assertRaises(KeyboardInterrupt, hasattr, A(), "b")
        class B:
            def __getattr__(self, what):
                raise SystemExit
        self.assertRaises(SystemExit, hasattr, B(), "b")

639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649
    def test_hash(self):
        hash(None)
        self.assertEqual(hash(1), hash(1L))
        self.assertEqual(hash(1), hash(1.0))
        hash('spam')
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertEqual(hash('spam'), hash(unicode('spam')))
        hash((0,1,2,3))
        def f(): pass
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, hash, [])
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, hash, {})
650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658
        # Bug 1536021: Allow hash to return long objects
        class X:
            def __hash__(self):
                return 2**100
        self.assertEquals(type(hash(X())), int)
        class Y(object):
            def __hash__(self):
                return 2**100
        self.assertEquals(type(hash(Y())), int)
659 660 661 662
        class Z(long):
            def __hash__(self):
                return self
        self.assertEquals(hash(Z(42)), hash(42L))
663 664 665 666

    def test_hex(self):
        self.assertEqual(hex(16), '0x10')
        self.assertEqual(hex(16L), '0x10L')
667
        self.assertEqual(hex(-16), '-0x10')
668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684
        self.assertEqual(hex(-16L), '-0x10L')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, hex, {})

    def test_id(self):
        id(None)
        id(1)
        id(1L)
        id(1.0)
        id('spam')
        id((0,1,2,3))
        id([0,1,2,3])
        id({'spam': 1, 'eggs': 2, 'ham': 3})

    # Test input() later, together with raw_input

    def test_intern(self):
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, intern)
685 686 687
        # This fails if the test is run twice with a constant string,
        # therefore append the run counter
        s = "never interned before " + str(numruns)
688
        self.assertTrue(intern(s) is s)
689
        s2 = s.swapcase().swapcase()
690
        self.assertTrue(intern(s2) is s)
691

692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708
        # Subclasses of string can't be interned, because they
        # provide too much opportunity for insane things to happen.
        # We don't want them in the interned dict and if they aren't
        # actually interned, we don't want to create the appearance
        # that they are by allowing intern() to succeeed.
        class S(str):
            def __hash__(self):
                return 123

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, intern, S("abc"))

        # It's still safe to pass these strings to routines that
        # call intern internally, e.g. PyObject_SetAttr().
        s = S("abc")
        setattr(s, s, s)
        self.assertEqual(getattr(s, s), s)

709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730
    def test_iter(self):
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, iter)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, iter, 42, 42)
        lists = [("1", "2"), ["1", "2"], "12"]
        if have_unicode:
            lists.append(unicode("12"))
        for l in lists:
            i = iter(l)
            self.assertEqual(i.next(), '1')
            self.assertEqual(i.next(), '2')
            self.assertRaises(StopIteration, i.next)

    def test_isinstance(self):
        class C:
            pass
        class D(C):
            pass
        class E:
            pass
        c = C()
        d = D()
        e = E()
731 732 733 734 735
        self.assertTrue(isinstance(c, C))
        self.assertTrue(isinstance(d, C))
        self.assertTrue(not isinstance(e, C))
        self.assertTrue(not isinstance(c, D))
        self.assertTrue(not isinstance('foo', E))
736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, isinstance, E, 'foo')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, isinstance)

    def test_issubclass(self):
        class C:
            pass
        class D(C):
            pass
        class E:
            pass
        c = C()
        d = D()
        e = E()
749 750 751
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(D, C))
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(C, C))
        self.assertTrue(not issubclass(C, D))
752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, issubclass, 'foo', E)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, issubclass, E, 'foo')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, issubclass)

    def test_len(self):
        self.assertEqual(len('123'), 3)
        self.assertEqual(len(()), 0)
        self.assertEqual(len((1, 2, 3, 4)), 4)
        self.assertEqual(len([1, 2, 3, 4]), 4)
        self.assertEqual(len({}), 0)
        self.assertEqual(len({'a':1, 'b': 2}), 2)
        class BadSeq:
            def __len__(self):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, len, BadSeq())
767 768 769 770 771
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, len, 2)
        class ClassicStyle: pass
        class NewStyle(object): pass
        self.assertRaises(AttributeError, len, ClassicStyle())
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, len, NewStyle())
772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842

    def test_map(self):
        self.assertEqual(
            map(None, 'hello world'),
            ['h','e','l','l','o',' ','w','o','r','l','d']
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(None, 'abcd', 'efg'),
            [('a', 'e'), ('b', 'f'), ('c', 'g'), ('d', None)]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(None, range(10)),
            [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(lambda x: x*x, range(1,4)),
            [1, 4, 9]
        )
        try:
            from math import sqrt
        except ImportError:
            def sqrt(x):
                return pow(x, 0.5)
        self.assertEqual(
            map(lambda x: map(sqrt,x), [[16, 4], [81, 9]]),
            [[4.0, 2.0], [9.0, 3.0]]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(lambda x, y: x+y, [1,3,2], [9,1,4]),
            [10, 4, 6]
        )

        def plus(*v):
            accu = 0
            for i in v: accu = accu + i
            return accu
        self.assertEqual(
            map(plus, [1, 3, 7]),
            [1, 3, 7]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(plus, [1, 3, 7], [4, 9, 2]),
            [1+4, 3+9, 7+2]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(plus, [1, 3, 7], [4, 9, 2], [1, 1, 0]),
            [1+4+1, 3+9+1, 7+2+0]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(None, Squares(10)),
            [0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(int, Squares(10)),
            [0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(None, Squares(3), Squares(2)),
            [(0,0), (1,1), (4,None)]
        )
        self.assertEqual(
            map(max, Squares(3), Squares(2)),
            [0, 1, 4]
        )
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, map)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, map, lambda x: x, 42)
        self.assertEqual(map(None, [42]), [42])
        class BadSeq:
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, map, lambda x: x, BadSeq())
843 844 845
        def badfunc(x):
            raise RuntimeError
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, map, badfunc, range(5))
846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856

    def test_max(self):
        self.assertEqual(max('123123'), '3')
        self.assertEqual(max(1, 2, 3), 3)
        self.assertEqual(max((1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3)), 3)
        self.assertEqual(max([1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]), 3)

        self.assertEqual(max(1, 2L, 3.0), 3.0)
        self.assertEqual(max(1L, 2.0, 3), 3)
        self.assertEqual(max(1.0, 2, 3L), 3L)

857 858 859 860 861 862 863
        for stmt in (
            "max(key=int)",                 # no args
            "max(1, key=int)",              # single arg not iterable
            "max(1, 2, keystone=int)",      # wrong keyword
            "max(1, 2, key=int, abc=int)",  # two many keywords
            "max(1, 2, key=1)",             # keyfunc is not callable
            ):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
864 865 866 867 868 869
            try:
                exec(stmt) in globals()
            except TypeError:
                pass
            else:
                self.fail(stmt)
870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880

        self.assertEqual(max((1,), key=neg), 1)     # one elem iterable
        self.assertEqual(max((1,2), key=neg), 1)    # two elem iterable
        self.assertEqual(max(1, 2, key=neg), 1)     # two elems

        data = [random.randrange(200) for i in range(100)]
        keys = dict((elem, random.randrange(50)) for elem in data)
        f = keys.__getitem__
        self.assertEqual(max(data, key=f),
                         sorted(reversed(data), key=f)[-1])

881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902
    def test_min(self):
        self.assertEqual(min('123123'), '1')
        self.assertEqual(min(1, 2, 3), 1)
        self.assertEqual(min((1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3)), 1)
        self.assertEqual(min([1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]), 1)

        self.assertEqual(min(1, 2L, 3.0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(min(1L, 2.0, 3), 1L)
        self.assertEqual(min(1.0, 2, 3L), 1.0)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, min)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, min, 42)
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, min, ())
        class BadSeq:
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, min, BadSeq())
        class BadNumber:
            def __cmp__(self, other):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, min, (42, BadNumber()))

903 904 905 906 907 908 909
        for stmt in (
            "min(key=int)",                 # no args
            "min(1, key=int)",              # single arg not iterable
            "min(1, 2, keystone=int)",      # wrong keyword
            "min(1, 2, key=int, abc=int)",  # two many keywords
            "min(1, 2, key=1)",             # keyfunc is not callable
            ):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
910 911 912 913 914 915
            try:
                exec(stmt) in globals()
            except TypeError:
                pass
            else:
                self.fail(stmt)
916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926

        self.assertEqual(min((1,), key=neg), 1)     # one elem iterable
        self.assertEqual(min((1,2), key=neg), 2)    # two elem iterable
        self.assertEqual(min(1, 2, key=neg), 2)     # two elems

        data = [random.randrange(200) for i in range(100)]
        keys = dict((elem, random.randrange(50)) for elem in data)
        f = keys.__getitem__
        self.assertEqual(min(data, key=f),
                         sorted(data, key=f)[0])

927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953
    def test_next(self):
        it = iter(range(2))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), 0)
        self.assertEqual(next(it), 1)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertEquals(next(it, 42), 42)

        class Iter(object):
            def __iter__(self):
                return self
            def next(self):
                raise StopIteration

        it = iter(Iter())
        self.assertEquals(next(it, 42), 42)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)

        def gen():
            yield 1
            return

        it = gen()
        self.assertEquals(next(it), 1)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertEquals(next(it, 42), 42)

954 955 956
    def test_oct(self):
        self.assertEqual(oct(100), '0144')
        self.assertEqual(oct(100L), '0144L')
957
        self.assertEqual(oct(-100), '-0144')
958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996
        self.assertEqual(oct(-100L), '-0144L')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, oct, ())

    def write_testfile(self):
        # NB the first 4 lines are also used to test input and raw_input, below
        fp = open(TESTFN, 'w')
        try:
            fp.write('1+1\n')
            fp.write('1+1\n')
            fp.write('The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog')
            fp.write('.\n')
            fp.write('Dear John\n')
            fp.write('XXX'*100)
            fp.write('YYY'*100)
        finally:
            fp.close()

    def test_open(self):
        self.write_testfile()
        fp = open(TESTFN, 'r')
        try:
            self.assertEqual(fp.readline(4), '1+1\n')
            self.assertEqual(fp.readline(4), '1+1\n')
            self.assertEqual(fp.readline(), 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.\n')
            self.assertEqual(fp.readline(4), 'Dear')
            self.assertEqual(fp.readline(100), ' John\n')
            self.assertEqual(fp.read(300), 'XXX'*100)
            self.assertEqual(fp.read(1000), 'YYY'*100)
        finally:
            fp.close()
        unlink(TESTFN)

    def test_ord(self):
        self.assertEqual(ord(' '), 32)
        self.assertEqual(ord('A'), 65)
        self.assertEqual(ord('a'), 97)
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertEqual(ord(unichr(sys.maxunicode)), sys.maxunicode)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, ord, 42)
997 998
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, ord, unicode("12"))
999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059

    def test_pow(self):
        self.assertEqual(pow(0,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(0,1), 0)
        self.assertEqual(pow(1,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(1,1), 1)

        self.assertEqual(pow(2,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2,10), 1024)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2,20), 1024*1024)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2,30), 1024*1024*1024)

        self.assertEqual(pow(-2,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2,1), -2)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2,2), 4)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2,3), -8)

        self.assertEqual(pow(0L,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(0L,1), 0)
        self.assertEqual(pow(1L,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(1L,1), 1)

        self.assertEqual(pow(2L,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2L,10), 1024)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2L,20), 1024*1024)
        self.assertEqual(pow(2L,30), 1024*1024*1024)

        self.assertEqual(pow(-2L,0), 1)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2L,1), -2)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2L,2), 4)
        self.assertEqual(pow(-2L,3), -8)

        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(0.,0), 1.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(0.,1), 0.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(1.,0), 1.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(1.,1), 1.)

        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(2.,0), 1.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(2.,10), 1024.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(2.,20), 1024.*1024.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(2.,30), 1024.*1024.*1024.)

        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(-2.,0), 1.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(-2.,1), -2.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(-2.,2), 4.)
        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(-2.,3), -8.)

        for x in 2, 2L, 2.0:
            for y in 10, 10L, 10.0:
                for z in 1000, 1000L, 1000.0:
                    if isinstance(x, float) or \
                       isinstance(y, float) or \
                       isinstance(z, float):
                        self.assertRaises(TypeError, pow, x, y, z)
                    else:
                        self.assertAlmostEqual(pow(x, y, z), 24.0)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, pow, -1, -2, 3)
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, pow, 1, 2, 0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, pow, -1L, -2L, 3L)
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, pow, 1L, 2L, 0L)
1060 1061
        # Will return complex in 3.0:
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, pow, -342.43, 0.234)
1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, pow)

    def test_range(self):
        self.assertEqual(range(3), [0, 1, 2])
        self.assertEqual(range(1, 5), [1, 2, 3, 4])
        self.assertEqual(range(0), [])
        self.assertEqual(range(-3), [])
        self.assertEqual(range(1, 10, 3), [1, 4, 7])
        self.assertEqual(range(5, -5, -3), [5, 2, -1, -4])

1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087
        # Now test range() with longs
        self.assertEqual(range(-2**100), [])
        self.assertEqual(range(0, -2**100), [])
        self.assertEqual(range(0, 2**100, -1), [])
        self.assertEqual(range(0, 2**100, -1), [])

        a = long(10 * sys.maxint)
        b = long(100 * sys.maxint)
        c = long(50 * sys.maxint)

        self.assertEqual(range(a, a+2), [a, a+1])
        self.assertEqual(range(a+2, a, -1L), [a+2, a+1])
        self.assertEqual(range(a+4, a, -2), [a+4, a+2])

        seq = range(a, b, c)
1088 1089
        self.assertIn(a, seq)
        self.assertNotIn(b, seq)
1090 1091 1092
        self.assertEqual(len(seq), 2)

        seq = range(b, a, -c)
1093 1094
        self.assertIn(b, seq)
        self.assertNotIn(a, seq)
1095 1096 1097
        self.assertEqual(len(seq), 2)

        seq = range(-a, -b, -c)
1098 1099
        self.assertIn(-a, seq)
        self.assertNotIn(-b, seq)
1100 1101
        self.assertEqual(len(seq), 2)

1102 1103 1104
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 1, 2, 3, 4)
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, range, 1, 2, 0)
1105 1106 1107 1108 1109
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, range, a, a + 1, long(0))

        class badzero(int):
            def __cmp__(self, other):
                raise RuntimeError
1110
            __hash__ = None # Invalid cmp makes this unhashable
1111
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, range, a, a + 1, badzero(1))
1112

1113 1114
        # Reject floats.
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 1., 1., 1.)
1115
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 1e100, 1e101, 1e101)
1116

1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, "spam")
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, 42, "spam")

        self.assertRaises(OverflowError, range, -sys.maxint, sys.maxint)
        self.assertRaises(OverflowError, range, 0, 2*sys.maxint)

1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172
        bignum = 2*sys.maxint
        smallnum = 42
        # Old-style user-defined class with __int__ method
        class I0:
            def __init__(self, n):
                self.n = int(n)
            def __int__(self):
                return self.n
        self.assertEqual(range(I0(bignum), I0(bignum + 1)), [bignum])
        self.assertEqual(range(I0(smallnum), I0(smallnum + 1)), [smallnum])

        # New-style user-defined class with __int__ method
        class I1(object):
            def __init__(self, n):
                self.n = int(n)
            def __int__(self):
                return self.n
        self.assertEqual(range(I1(bignum), I1(bignum + 1)), [bignum])
        self.assertEqual(range(I1(smallnum), I1(smallnum + 1)), [smallnum])

        # New-style user-defined class with failing __int__ method
        class IX(object):
            def __int__(self):
                raise RuntimeError
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, range, IX())

        # New-style user-defined class with invalid __int__ method
        class IN(object):
            def __int__(self):
                return "not a number"
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, IN())

        # Exercise various combinations of bad arguments, to check
        # refcounting logic
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, 0.0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0.0)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, 0, 1.0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, 0.0, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0, 0.0, 1.0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0, 1.0)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0.0, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, range, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0)



1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184
    def test_input_and_raw_input(self):
        self.write_testfile()
        fp = open(TESTFN, 'r')
        savestdin = sys.stdin
        savestdout = sys.stdout # Eats the echo
        try:
            sys.stdin = fp
            sys.stdout = BitBucket()
            self.assertEqual(input(), 2)
            self.assertEqual(input('testing\n'), 2)
            self.assertEqual(raw_input(), 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.')
            self.assertEqual(raw_input('testing\n'), 'Dear John')
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
1185

1186 1187 1188 1189
            # SF 1535165: don't segfault on closed stdin
            # sys.stdout must be a regular file for triggering
            sys.stdout = savestdout
            sys.stdin.close()
1190
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, input)
1191 1192

            sys.stdout = BitBucket()
1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198
            sys.stdin = cStringIO.StringIO("NULL\0")
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, input, 42, 42)
            sys.stdin = cStringIO.StringIO("    'whitespace'")
            self.assertEqual(input(), 'whitespace')
            sys.stdin = cStringIO.StringIO()
            self.assertRaises(EOFError, input)
1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207 1208

            # SF 876178: make sure input() respect future options.
            sys.stdin = cStringIO.StringIO('1/2')
            sys.stdout = cStringIO.StringIO()
            exec compile('print input()', 'test_builtin_tmp', 'exec')
            sys.stdin.seek(0, 0)
            exec compile('from __future__ import division;print input()',
                         'test_builtin_tmp', 'exec')
            sys.stdin.seek(0, 0)
            exec compile('print input()', 'test_builtin_tmp', 'exec')
1209 1210 1211 1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218
            # The result we expect depends on whether new division semantics
            # are already in effect.
            if 1/2 == 0:
                # This test was compiled with old semantics.
                expected = ['0', '0.5', '0']
            else:
                # This test was compiled with new semantics (e.g., -Qnew
                # was given on the command line.
                expected = ['0.5', '0.5', '0.5']
            self.assertEqual(sys.stdout.getvalue().splitlines(), expected)
1219

1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230
            del sys.stdout
            self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, input, 'prompt')
            del sys.stdin
            self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, input, 'prompt')
        finally:
            sys.stdin = savestdin
            sys.stdout = savestdout
            fp.close()
            unlink(TESTFN)

    def test_reduce(self):
1231 1232
        add = lambda x, y: x+y
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, ['a', 'b', 'c'], ''), 'abc')
1233
        self.assertEqual(
1234
            reduce(add, [['a', 'c'], [], ['d', 'w']], []),
1235 1236 1237 1238 1239 1240 1241
            ['a','c','d','w']
        )
        self.assertEqual(reduce(lambda x, y: x*y, range(2,8), 1), 5040)
        self.assertEqual(
            reduce(lambda x, y: x*y, range(2,21), 1L),
            2432902008176640000L
        )
1242 1243 1244
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, Squares(10)), 285)
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, Squares(10), 0), 285)
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, Squares(0), 0), 0)
1245
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce)
1246
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, 42)
1247 1248
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, 42, 42)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, 42, 42, 42)
1249 1250
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, None, range(5))
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, add, 42)
1251 1252 1253
        self.assertEqual(reduce(42, "1"), "1") # func is never called with one item
        self.assertEqual(reduce(42, "", "1"), "1") # func is never called with one item
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, 42, (42, 42))
1254 1255 1256 1257 1258
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, add, []) # arg 2 must not be empty sequence with no initial value
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, add, "")
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, reduce, add, ())
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, [], None), None)
        self.assertEqual(reduce(add, [], 42), 42)
1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288

        class BadSeq:
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, reduce, 42, BadSeq())

    def test_reload(self):
        import marshal
        reload(marshal)
        import string
        reload(string)
        ## import sys
        ## self.assertRaises(ImportError, reload, sys)

    def test_repr(self):
        self.assertEqual(repr(''), '\'\'')
        self.assertEqual(repr(0), '0')
        self.assertEqual(repr(0L), '0L')
        self.assertEqual(repr(()), '()')
        self.assertEqual(repr([]), '[]')
        self.assertEqual(repr({}), '{}')
        a = []
        a.append(a)
        self.assertEqual(repr(a), '[[...]]')
        a = {}
        a[0] = a
        self.assertEqual(repr(a), '{0: {...}}')

    def test_round(self):
        self.assertEqual(round(0.0), 0.0)
1289
        self.assertEqual(type(round(0.0)), float)  # Will be int in 3.0.
1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317
        self.assertEqual(round(1.0), 1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(10.0), 10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(1000000000.0), 1000000000.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(1e20), 1e20)

        self.assertEqual(round(-1.0), -1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-10.0), -10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-1000000000.0), -1000000000.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-1e20), -1e20)

        self.assertEqual(round(0.1), 0.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(1.1), 1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(10.1), 10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(1000000000.1), 1000000000.0)

        self.assertEqual(round(-1.1), -1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-10.1), -10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-1000000000.1), -1000000000.0)

        self.assertEqual(round(0.9), 1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(9.9), 10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(999999999.9), 1000000000.0)

        self.assertEqual(round(-0.9), -1.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-9.9), -10.0)
        self.assertEqual(round(-999999999.9), -1000000000.0)

        self.assertEqual(round(-8.0, -1), -10.0)
1318 1319 1320 1321 1322
        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8.0, -1)), float)

        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8.0, 0)), float)
        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8.0, 1)), float)

1323
        # Check half rounding behaviour.
1324
        self.assertEqual(round(5.5), 6)
1325
        self.assertEqual(round(6.5), 7)
1326
        self.assertEqual(round(-5.5), -6)
1327
        self.assertEqual(round(-6.5), -7)
1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336

        # Check behavior on ints
        self.assertEqual(round(0), 0)
        self.assertEqual(round(8), 8)
        self.assertEqual(round(-8), -8)
        self.assertEqual(type(round(0)), float)  # Will be int in 3.0.
        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8, -1)), float)
        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8, 0)), float)
        self.assertEqual(type(round(-8, 1)), float)
1337

1338 1339 1340
        # test new kwargs
        self.assertEqual(round(number=-8.0, ndigits=-1), -10.0)

1341 1342
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, round)

1343 1344
        # test generic rounding delegation for reals
        class TestRound(object):
1345 1346
            def __float__(self):
                return 23.0
1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353

        class TestNoRound(object):
            pass

        self.assertEqual(round(TestRound()), 23)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, round, 1, 2, 3)
1354
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, round, TestNoRound())
1355 1356

        t = TestNoRound()
1357 1358 1359
        t.__float__ = lambda *args: args
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, round, t)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, round, t, 0)
1360

1361 1362 1363 1364 1365 1366 1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379 1380 1381
    # Some versions of glibc for alpha have a bug that affects
    # float -> integer rounding (floor, ceil, rint, round) for
    # values in the range [2**52, 2**53).  See:
    #
    #   http://sources.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=5350
    #
    # We skip this test on Linux/alpha if it would fail.
    linux_alpha = (platform.system().startswith('Linux') and
                   platform.machine().startswith('alpha'))
    system_round_bug = round(5e15+1) != 5e15+1
    @unittest.skipIf(linux_alpha and system_round_bug,
                     "test will fail;  failure is probably due to a "
                     "buggy system round function")
    def test_round_large(self):
        # Issue #1869: integral floats should remain unchanged
        self.assertEqual(round(5e15-1), 5e15-1)
        self.assertEqual(round(5e15), 5e15)
        self.assertEqual(round(5e15+1), 5e15+1)
        self.assertEqual(round(5e15+2), 5e15+2)
        self.assertEqual(round(5e15+3), 5e15+3)

1382
    def test_setattr(self):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
1383 1384 1385 1386
        setattr(sys, 'spam', 1)
        self.assertEqual(sys.spam, 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, setattr, sys, 1, 'spam')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, setattr)
1387

1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408
    def test_sum(self):
        self.assertEqual(sum([]), 0)
        self.assertEqual(sum(range(2,8)), 27)
        self.assertEqual(sum(iter(range(2,8))), 27)
        self.assertEqual(sum(Squares(10)), 285)
        self.assertEqual(sum(iter(Squares(10))), 285)
        self.assertEqual(sum([[1], [2], [3]], []), [1, 2, 3])

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, 42)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, ['a', 'b', 'c'])
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, ['a', 'b', 'c'], '')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, [[1], [2], [3]])
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, [{2:3}])
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sum, [{2:3}]*2, {2:3})

        class BadSeq:
            def __getitem__(self, index):
                raise ValueError
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, sum, BadSeq())

1409 1410 1411 1412
        empty = []
        sum(([x] for x in range(10)), empty)
        self.assertEqual(empty, [])

1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427
    def test_type(self):
        self.assertEqual(type(''),  type('123'))
        self.assertNotEqual(type(''), type(()))

    def test_unichr(self):
        if have_unicode:
            self.assertEqual(unichr(32), unicode(' '))
            self.assertEqual(unichr(65), unicode('A'))
            self.assertEqual(unichr(97), unicode('a'))
            self.assertEqual(
                unichr(sys.maxunicode),
                unicode('\\U%08x' % (sys.maxunicode), 'unicode-escape')
            )
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, unichr, sys.maxunicode+1)
            self.assertRaises(TypeError, unichr)
1428
            self.assertRaises((OverflowError, ValueError), unichr, 2**32)
1429

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
1430 1431 1432
    # We don't want self in vars(), so these are static methods

    @staticmethod
1433 1434 1435
    def get_vars_f0():
        return vars()

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
1436
    @staticmethod
1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442
    def get_vars_f2():
        BuiltinTest.get_vars_f0()
        a = 1
        b = 2
        return vars()

1443 1444 1445 1446 1447
    class C_get_vars(object):
        def getDict(self):
            return {'a':2}
        __dict__ = property(fget=getDict)

1448
    def test_vars(self):
1449
        self.assertEqual(set(vars()), set(dir()))
1450
        import sys
1451
        self.assertEqual(set(vars(sys)), set(dir(sys)))
1452 1453 1454 1455
        self.assertEqual(self.get_vars_f0(), {})
        self.assertEqual(self.get_vars_f2(), {'a': 1, 'b': 2})
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, vars, 42, 42)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, vars, 42)
1456
        self.assertEqual(vars(self.C_get_vars()), {'a':2})
1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471

    def test_zip(self):
        a = (1, 2, 3)
        b = (4, 5, 6)
        t = [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
        self.assertEqual(zip(a, b), t)
        b = [4, 5, 6]
        self.assertEqual(zip(a, b), t)
        b = (4, 5, 6, 7)
        self.assertEqual(zip(a, b), t)
        class I:
            def __getitem__(self, i):
                if i < 0 or i > 2: raise IndexError
                return i + 4
        self.assertEqual(zip(a, I()), t)
1472 1473
        self.assertEqual(zip(), [])
        self.assertEqual(zip(*[]), [])
1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, zip, None)
        class G:
            pass
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, zip, a, G())

        # Make sure zip doesn't try to allocate a billion elements for the
        # result list when one of its arguments doesn't say how long it is.
        # A MemoryError is the most likely failure mode.
        class SequenceWithoutALength:
            def __getitem__(self, i):
                if i == 5:
                    raise IndexError
                else:
                    return i
        self.assertEqual(
            zip(SequenceWithoutALength(), xrange(2**30)),
            list(enumerate(range(5)))
        )

        class BadSeq:
            def __getitem__(self, i):
                if i == 5:
                    raise ValueError
                else:
                    return i
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, zip, BadSeq(), BadSeq())

1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584
    def test_format(self):
        # Test the basic machinery of the format() builtin.  Don't test
        #  the specifics of the various formatters
        self.assertEqual(format(3, ''), '3')

        # Returns some classes to use for various tests.  There's
        #  an old-style version, and a new-style version
        def classes_new():
            class A(object):
                def __init__(self, x):
                    self.x = x
                def __format__(self, format_spec):
                    return str(self.x) + format_spec
            class DerivedFromA(A):
                pass

            class Simple(object): pass
            class DerivedFromSimple(Simple):
                def __init__(self, x):
                    self.x = x
                def __format__(self, format_spec):
                    return str(self.x) + format_spec
            class DerivedFromSimple2(DerivedFromSimple): pass
            return A, DerivedFromA, DerivedFromSimple, DerivedFromSimple2

        # In 3.0, classes_classic has the same meaning as classes_new
        def classes_classic():
            class A:
                def __init__(self, x):
                    self.x = x
                def __format__(self, format_spec):
                    return str(self.x) + format_spec
            class DerivedFromA(A):
                pass

            class Simple: pass
            class DerivedFromSimple(Simple):
                def __init__(self, x):
                    self.x = x
                def __format__(self, format_spec):
                    return str(self.x) + format_spec
            class DerivedFromSimple2(DerivedFromSimple): pass
            return A, DerivedFromA, DerivedFromSimple, DerivedFromSimple2

        def class_test(A, DerivedFromA, DerivedFromSimple, DerivedFromSimple2):
            self.assertEqual(format(A(3), 'spec'), '3spec')
            self.assertEqual(format(DerivedFromA(4), 'spec'), '4spec')
            self.assertEqual(format(DerivedFromSimple(5), 'abc'), '5abc')
            self.assertEqual(format(DerivedFromSimple2(10), 'abcdef'),
                             '10abcdef')

        class_test(*classes_new())
        class_test(*classes_classic())

        def empty_format_spec(value):
            # test that:
            #  format(x, '') == str(x)
            #  format(x) == str(x)
            self.assertEqual(format(value, ""), str(value))
            self.assertEqual(format(value), str(value))

        # for builtin types, format(x, "") == str(x)
        empty_format_spec(17**13)
        empty_format_spec(1.0)
        empty_format_spec(3.1415e104)
        empty_format_spec(-3.1415e104)
        empty_format_spec(3.1415e-104)
        empty_format_spec(-3.1415e-104)
        empty_format_spec(object)
        empty_format_spec(None)

        # TypeError because self.__format__ returns the wrong type
        class BadFormatResult:
            def __format__(self, format_spec):
                return 1.0
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, format, BadFormatResult(), "")

        # TypeError because format_spec is not unicode or str
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, format, object(), 4)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, format, object(), object())

        # tests for object.__format__ really belong elsewhere, but
        #  there's no good place to put them
        x = object().__format__('')
1585
        self.assertTrue(x.startswith('<object object at'))
1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591

        # first argument to object.__format__ must be string
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, object().__format__, 3)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, object().__format__, object())
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, object().__format__, None)

1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626
        # --------------------------------------------------------------------
        # Issue #7994: object.__format__ with a non-empty format string is
        #  pending deprecated
        def test_deprecated_format_string(obj, fmt_str, should_raise_warning):
            with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w:
                warnings.simplefilter("always", PendingDeprecationWarning)
                format(obj, fmt_str)
            if should_raise_warning:
                self.assertEqual(len(w), 1)
                self.assertIsInstance(w[0].message, PendingDeprecationWarning)
                self.assertIn('object.__format__ with a non-empty format '
                              'string', str(w[0].message))
            else:
                self.assertEqual(len(w), 0)

        fmt_strs = ['', 's', u'', u's']

        class A:
            def __format__(self, fmt_str):
                return format('', fmt_str)

        for fmt_str in fmt_strs:
            test_deprecated_format_string(A(), fmt_str, False)

        class B:
            pass

        class C(object):
            pass

        for cls in [object, B, C]:
            for fmt_str in fmt_strs:
                test_deprecated_format_string(cls(), fmt_str, len(fmt_str) != 0)
        # --------------------------------------------------------------------

1627 1628 1629 1630
        # make sure we can take a subclass of str as a format spec
        class DerivedFromStr(str): pass
        self.assertEqual(format(0, DerivedFromStr('10')), '         0')

1631 1632 1633 1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639
    def test_bin(self):
        self.assertEqual(bin(0), '0b0')
        self.assertEqual(bin(1), '0b1')
        self.assertEqual(bin(-1), '-0b1')
        self.assertEqual(bin(2**65), '0b1' + '0' * 65)
        self.assertEqual(bin(2**65-1), '0b' + '1' * 65)
        self.assertEqual(bin(-(2**65)), '-0b1' + '0' * 65)
        self.assertEqual(bin(-(2**65-1)), '-0b' + '1' * 65)

1640 1641 1642 1643 1644
    def test_bytearray_translate(self):
        x = bytearray("abc")
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, x.translate, "1", 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, x.translate, "1"*256, 1)

1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683
class TestSorted(unittest.TestCase):

    def test_basic(self):
        data = range(100)
        copy = data[:]
        random.shuffle(copy)
        self.assertEqual(data, sorted(copy))
        self.assertNotEqual(data, copy)

        data.reverse()
        random.shuffle(copy)
        self.assertEqual(data, sorted(copy, cmp=lambda x, y: cmp(y,x)))
        self.assertNotEqual(data, copy)
        random.shuffle(copy)
        self.assertEqual(data, sorted(copy, key=lambda x: -x))
        self.assertNotEqual(data, copy)
        random.shuffle(copy)
        self.assertEqual(data, sorted(copy, reverse=1))
        self.assertNotEqual(data, copy)

    def test_inputtypes(self):
        s = 'abracadabra'
        types = [list, tuple]
        if have_unicode:
            types.insert(0, unicode)
        for T in types:
            self.assertEqual(sorted(s), sorted(T(s)))

        s = ''.join(dict.fromkeys(s).keys())  # unique letters only
        types = [set, frozenset, list, tuple, dict.fromkeys]
        if have_unicode:
            types.insert(0, unicode)
        for T in types:
            self.assertEqual(sorted(s), sorted(T(s)))

    def test_baddecorator(self):
        data = 'The quick Brown fox Jumped over The lazy Dog'.split()
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sorted, data, None, lambda x,y: 0)

1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690
def _run_unittest(*args):
    with check_py3k_warnings(
            (".+ not supported in 3.x", DeprecationWarning),
            (".+ is renamed to imp.reload", DeprecationWarning),
            ("classic int division", DeprecationWarning)):
        run_unittest(*args)

1691 1692 1693
def test_main(verbose=None):
    test_classes = (BuiltinTest, TestSorted)

1694
    _run_unittest(*test_classes)
1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700

    # verify reference counting
    if verbose and hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount"):
        import gc
        counts = [None] * 5
        for i in xrange(len(counts)):
1701
            _run_unittest(*test_classes)
1702 1703 1704 1705
            gc.collect()
            counts[i] = sys.gettotalrefcount()
        print counts

1706 1707

if __name__ == "__main__":
1708
    test_main(verbose=True)