David Antonini <davidanton...@hotmail.com> added the comment:
I'm having a problem with mock.call when I import it directly from unittest.mock. When I do: from unittest.mock import patch, mock_open, call mocked_print.assert_has_calls([ call("first print"), call("second print"), ]) I get: C:\Program Files (x86)\Python37-64\lib\doctest.py:932: in find self._find(tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, {}) C:\Program Files (x86)\Python37-64\lib\doctest.py:991: in _find if ((inspect.isroutine(inspect.unwrap(val)) C:\Program Files (x86)\Python37-64\lib\inspect.py:515: in unwrap raise ValueError('wrapper loop when unwrapping {!r}'.format(f)) E ValueError: wrapper loop when unwrapping call collected 1 item / 1 errors But when I don't import call directly my test runs as expected: from unittest.mock import patch, mock_open import unittest.mock mocked_print.assert_has_calls([ mock.call(), mock.call(), ]) I have the same issue when using: assert mocked_print.call_args_list == [call("first print"), call("second print")] <- ValueError assert mocked_print.call_args_list == [mock.call("first print"), mock.call("second print")] <- Works as expected. ---------- _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <https://bugs.python.org/issue35753> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com