Use print function in mock docs.

This commit is contained in:
Berker Peksag 2015-09-10 21:41:15 +03:00
parent 3fc536f1c9
commit 920f6db10b
1 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -532,7 +532,7 @@ the *new_callable* argument to :func:`patch`.
keyword arguments (or an empty dictionary). keyword arguments (or an empty dictionary).
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
>>> print mock.call_args >>> print(mock.call_args)
None None
>>> mock() >>> mock()
>>> mock.call_args >>> mock.call_args
@ -727,7 +727,7 @@ apply to method calls on the mock object.
>>> with patch('__main__.Foo.foo', new_callable=PropertyMock) as mock_foo: >>> with patch('__main__.Foo.foo', new_callable=PropertyMock) as mock_foo:
... mock_foo.return_value = 'mockity-mock' ... mock_foo.return_value = 'mockity-mock'
... this_foo = Foo() ... this_foo = Foo()
... print this_foo.foo ... print(this_foo.foo)
... this_foo.foo = 6 ... this_foo.foo = 6
... ...
mockity-mock mockity-mock
@ -1109,7 +1109,7 @@ Another use case might be to replace an object with a :class:`io.StringIO` insta
>>> from io import StringIO >>> from io import StringIO
>>> def foo(): >>> def foo():
... print 'Something' ... print('Something')
... ...
>>> @patch('sys.stdout', new_callable=StringIO) >>> @patch('sys.stdout', new_callable=StringIO)
... def test(mock_stdout): ... def test(mock_stdout):
@ -1223,7 +1223,7 @@ ends.
>>> import os >>> import os
>>> with patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'}): >>> with patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'}):
... print os.environ['newkey'] ... print(os.environ['newkey'])
... ...
newvalue newvalue
>>> assert 'newkey' not in os.environ >>> assert 'newkey' not in os.environ
@ -1420,9 +1420,9 @@ inform the patchers of the different prefix by setting ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``:
>>> @patch('__main__.value', 'not three') >>> @patch('__main__.value', 'not three')
... class Thing: ... class Thing:
... def foo_one(self): ... def foo_one(self):
... print value ... print(value)
... def foo_two(self): ... def foo_two(self):
... print value ... print(value)
... ...
>>> >>>
>>> Thing().foo_one() >>> Thing().foo_one()