This test failed on WindowsME because the full file path did not get

reported consistently with the *nix world.  'Lib/test/test_warnings.py'
came out as 'lib\test\test_warnings.py'.  The basename is all we care
about so I used that.
This commit is contained in:
Raymond Hettinger 2003-07-13 06:15:11 +00:00
parent 0320464583
commit dc9dcf135e
2 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -2,9 +2,9 @@ test_warnings
('ignore', False, 'FutureWarning', False, 0)
('ignore', True, 'OverflowWarning', True, 0)
('ignore', True, 'PendingDeprecationWarning', True, 0)
Lib/test/test_warnings.py:31: UserWarning: hello world
Lib/test/test_warnings.py:32: UserWarning: hello world
Lib/test/test_warnings.py:33: DeprecationWarning: hello world
Lib/test/test_warnings.py:35: UserWarning: hello world
test_warnings.py:31: UserWarning: hello world
test_warnings.py:32: UserWarning: hello world
test_warnings.py:33: DeprecationWarning: hello world
test_warnings.py:35: UserWarning: hello world
Caught UserWarning: hello world
Caught AssertionError: invalid action: 'booh'

View File

@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
import warnings
import os
# The warnings module isn't easily tested, because it relies on module
# globals to store configuration information. We need to extract the
@ -8,8 +9,7 @@ _filters = []
_showwarning = None
def showwarning(message, category, filename, lineno, file=None):
i = filename.find("Lib")
filename = filename[i:]
filename = os.path.basename(filename)
print "%s:%s: %s: %s" % (filename, lineno, category.__name__, message)
def monkey():