On Jun 3, 9:47 am, Phlip <phlip2...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hypo Nt: > > Here's xmlrunner.py: > > http://www.rittau.org/python/xmlrunner.py > > you attach it to your developer tests, and it emits a file called > "TEST-unittest.TestSuite.xml", containing auspicious wackiness like > this: > > <testcase > classname="tests.unit.gateways.authorize_net_tests.AuthorizeNetTests" > name="test_failed_credit" time="0.0017"></testcase> > <testcase > classname="tests.unit.gateways.authorize_net_tests.AuthorizeNetTests" > name="test_fraudulent_avs_result" time="0.0010"></testcase> > <testcase > classname="tests.unit.gateways.authorize_net_tests.AuthorizeNetTests" > name="test_fraudulent_cvv_result" time="0.0011"></testcase> > > That looks just like the kind of stereotypical XML thatXSLwas > designed to convert into HTML, for civilian reading! All the verbiage > for XML test runners claim they do JUnit output, so that JUnitXSL > files can convert them into HTML. > > So here's a sample JUNIT.XSL: > > http://www.google.com/codesearch/p?hl=en#T32D24pjTaw/trunk/test-integ... > > It contains matchers like these: > > <xsl:template match="testcase" mode="print.test"> > > And when I run it with this command line... > > xsltproc JUNIT.XSLTEST-unittest.TestSuite.xml > > ...it outputs nothing! > > Long story short, how do I format my test output prettily? All the > bloggage on this seems to assume that everyone already knows this > because _everyone_ graduated to Python thru Java...
Bump? Anyone reporting on their unit tests here? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list