Can python doctest ignore some output lines?

Question:

I’d like to write a doctest like this:

"""
>>> print a.string()
          foo : a
          bar : b
         date : <I don't care about the date output>
          baz : c
"""

Is there any way to do this? I think it would make more sense to switch to unittest, but I’m curious whether it’s possible to specify a range of output that shouldn’t be matched for the test in doctest.

Thanks!

Asked By: cjb

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Answers:

With doctest.ELLIPSIS, you can use ... to mean “match any string here”. You can set doctest options with a doctest directive, to make it active for just one test case: one example in the online docs is:

>>> print range(20) # doctest:+ELLIPSIS
[0, 1, ..., 18, 19]

If you want a doctest option to be active throughout, you can pass it as the optionflags= argument to whatever doctest functions you use, e.g. doctest.testfile. (You can pass multiple option flags there by using the | operator to bit-or them).

Answered By: Alex Martelli

Ignoring the whole line is bit tricky though. Here:

"""
>>> do_your_thing() #doctest:+ELLIPSIS
...
"""

The triple dot will be interpreted as line continuation, and cause a syntax error.

If you want to ignore the whole line, you’ll need something like:

"""
>>> sys.stdout.write('skip from here '); do_your_thing() #doctest:+ELLIPSIS
skip from here ...
"""
Answered By: Mark Horvath

Responding to questions about “how can we ignore the whole line”: yes, the fact that “…” also looks like a continuation like makes it hard to ignore the entire output. You can use “#doctest: +SKIP” if you just want to skip the example entirely, but that won’t work if you are relying on its side-effects. If you really need to do this, I suppose you could monkey-patch the doctest module itself, though I wouldn’t particularly recommend it:

>>> import doctest
>>> doctest.ELLIPSIS_MARKER = '-etc-'
>>> print 12 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
-etc-

(this test passes.)

Or you could temporarily suppress stdout and/or stderr:

>>> # Suppress stdout
>>> import sys
>>> class DevNull:
...     def noop(*args, **kwargs): pass
...     close = write = flush = writelines = noop
>>> sys.stdout = DevNull()
>>> # Run a test and ignore output (but we need its side effects)
>>> print 12 # NOTE: stdout is suppressed!
>>> # Restore stdout
>>> sys.stdout = sys.__stdout__

(this test also passes.)

Answered By: Edward Loper

Can I have an ellipsis at the beginning of the line in a Python doctest? explains how to create a custom output checker that uses an additional string as an ellipsis. This would let you write the following, while still used ‘…’ elsewhere.

def foo():
  """
  >>> foo() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
  [...] world
  """
  print "hello world"
Answered By: samwyse

I found it easier to simply assign the unneeded return values to a variable:

>>> _ = do_something()
>>> check_something()
True
Answered By: WilliamMayor

You can write tuples before and after your function (hack inspired by answer of Mark Horvath):

def foo():
    """
    >>> ();foo();() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
    (...)
    """
    print "Hello world"
    return "Hello world"
Answered By: Wojciech KaƂuski
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