mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
a02cb474f9
add: * `_simple_enum` decorator to transform a normal class into an enum * `_test_simple_enum` function to compare * `_old_convert_` to enable checking `_convert_` generated enums `_simple_enum` takes a normal class and converts it into an enum: @simple_enum(Enum) class Color: RED = 1 GREEN = 2 BLUE = 3 `_old_convert_` works much like` _convert_` does, using the original logic: # in a test file import socket, enum CheckedAddressFamily = enum._old_convert_( enum.IntEnum, 'AddressFamily', 'socket', lambda C: C.isupper() and C.startswith('AF_'), source=_socket, ) `_test_simple_enum` takes a traditional enum and a simple enum and compares the two: # in the REPL or the same module as Color class CheckedColor(Enum): RED = 1 GREEN = 2 BLUE = 3 _test_simple_enum(CheckedColor, Color) _test_simple_enum(CheckedAddressFamily, socket.AddressFamily) Any important differences will raise a TypeError |
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.. | ||
test_tkinter | ||
test_ttk | ||
README | ||
__init__.py | ||
runtktests.py | ||
support.py | ||
widget_tests.py |
README
Writing new tests ================= Precaution ---------- New tests should always use only one Tk window at once, like all the current tests do. This means that you have to destroy the current window before creating another one, and clean up after the test. The motivation behind this is that some tests may depend on having its window focused while it is running to work properly, and it may be hard to force focus on your window across platforms (right now only test_traversal at test_ttk.test_widgets.NotebookTest depends on this).