A test of the `new' module. The new.code() test is fairly bogus since

I'm really not sure what the proper inputs are.  I do flex the
function call though by passing in arguments of the proper type.  I
don't try to exec the code object that gets returned!
This commit is contained in:
Barry Warsaw 1996-12-10 16:28:53 +00:00
parent 0f150e41be
commit 924e5d55b7
1 changed files with 44 additions and 0 deletions

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Lib/test/test_new.py Normal file
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import sys
import new
class Eggs:
def get_yolks(self):
return self.yolks
m = new.module('Spam')
m.Eggs = Eggs
sys.modules['Spam'] = m
import Spam
def get_more_yolks(self):
return self.yolks + 3
C = new.classobj('Spam', (Spam.Eggs,), {'get_more_yolks': get_more_yolks})
c = new.instance(C, {'yolks': 3})
def break_yolks(self):
self.yolks = self.yolks - 2
im = new.instancemethod(break_yolks, c, C)
if c.get_yolks() <> 3 and c.get_more_yolks() <> 6:
print 'Broken call of hand-crafted class instance'
im()
if c.get_yolks() <> 1 and c.get_more_yolks() <> 4:
print 'Broken call of hand-crafted instance method'
codestr = '''
a = 1
b = 2
c = a + b
'''
ccode = compile(codestr, '<string>', 'exec')
g = {'c': 0, '__builtins__': __builtins__}
# this test could be more robust
func = new.function(ccode, g)
func()
if g['c'] <> 3:
print 'Could not create a proper function object'
# bogus test of new.code()
new.code(3, 3, 3, codestr, (), (), (), "<string>", "<name>")