Fred L. Drake, Jr. wrote: > Scott David Daniels wrote: > > Would "expect_fail", "expect_failure", "expected_fail", or > > "expected_failure", work for you? > > None of these use the same naming convention as the other unittest object > attributes. Perhaps something like failureExpected? > > I'd definately prefer something that reads cleanly; mirroring the exact form > of the word "fail" doesn't make sense; making it readable does.
Hmmm.... I'd like to avoid anything looking like "failIf" or whatever (I'm afraid it will be attempted as a method), but the point about matching styles does make sense. I see my idea of XXX has inspired a huge groundswell of "no comment" yet. How about: @expectFailure('some reason for the failure') def test_whatever(self): ... Nick Coghlan (on the recipe) wrote: > While embedding the 'or' in the except clause header is cute, its also > a little subtle and obscure, and causes the check to be executed every > time the test is run, rather than when the test is defined. I wasn't striving for cute or clever there. I did want the pick up of TestCase.failureException to occur at test time, however. My reasoning is that failureException became a class variable for a reason, and test running frameworks other than unittest.main might well be stomping their own exception in there. Certainly the "failIf" methods all raise whatever exception is stored as a class variable of TestCase. Do we want to include the equivalent of find_broken_tests(module) in unittest or is leaving it in the recipe for report writers better? I suppose it wants a better name as well. findExpectedFailures(module)? I'm off to see family, I'll check back end of next week. --Scott David Daniels [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com