Sun, 03 Jul 2011 18:01:53 +0200
Extended the unit test interface to support skipped tests, expected failures and unexpected successes and to better cope with Python2 scripts when run from the eric IDE.
"""Add things to old Pythons so I can pretend they are newer.""" # This file does lots of tricky stuff, so disable a bunch of lintisms. # pylint: disable-msg=F0401,W0611,W0622 # F0401: Unable to import blah # W0611: Unused import blah # W0622: Redefining built-in blah import os, sys # Python 2.3 doesn't have `set` try: set = set # new in 2.4 except NameError: from sets import Set as set # Python 2.3 doesn't have `sorted`. try: sorted = sorted except NameError: def sorted(iterable): """A 2.3-compatible implementation of `sorted`.""" lst = list(iterable) lst.sort() return lst # Pythons 2 and 3 differ on where to get StringIO try: from cStringIO import StringIO BytesIO = StringIO except ImportError: from io import StringIO, BytesIO # What's a string called? try: string_class = basestring except NameError: string_class = str # Where do pickles come from? try: import cPickle as pickle except ImportError: import pickle # range or xrange? try: range = xrange except NameError: range = range # Exec is a statement in Py2, a function in Py3 if sys.hexversion > 0x03000000: def exec_function(source, filename, global_map): """A wrapper around exec().""" exec(compile(source, filename, "exec"), global_map) else: # OK, this is pretty gross. In Py2, exec was a statement, but that will # be a syntax error if we try to put it in a Py3 file, even if it is never # executed. So hide it inside an evaluated string literal instead. eval(compile("""\ def exec_function(source, filename, global_map): exec compile(source, filename, "exec") in global_map """, "<exec_function>", "exec" )) # # eflag: FileType = Python2