import unittest
import sys
class PEP3131Test(unittest.TestCase):
def test_valid(self):
class T:
ä = 1
µ = 2 # this is a compatibility character
蟒 = 3
x󠄀 = 4
self.assertEqual(getattr(T, "\xe4"), 1)
self.assertEqual(getattr(T, "\u03bc"), 2)
self.assertEqual(getattr(T, '\u87d2'), 3)
self.assertEqual(getattr(T, 'x\U000E0100'), 4)
def test_non_bmp_normalized(self):
𝔘𝔫𝔦𝔠𝔬𝔡𝔢 = 1
self.assertIn("Unicode", dir())
def test_invalid(self):
try:
from test import badsyntax_3131
except SyntaxError as s:
self.assertEqual(str(s),
"invalid character in identifier (badsyntax_3131.py, line 2)")
else:
self.fail("expected exception didn't occur")
if __name__ == "__main__":
unittest.main()
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Zachary Ware yazdı
I have compared output between pre- and post-patch runs of these tests to make sure there's nothing missing and nothing broken, on both Windows and Linux. The only differences I found were actually tests that were previously *not* run.
38c707e7