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expecttest PyPI version

This library implements expect tests (also known as "golden" tests). Expect tests are a method of writing tests where instead of hard-coding the expected output of a test, you run the test to get the output, and the test framework automatically populates the expected output. If the output of the test changes, you can rerun the test with the environment variable EXPECTTEST_ACCEPT=1 to automatically update the expected output.

Somewhat unusually, this library implements inline expect tests: that is to say, the expected output isn't saved to an external file, it is saved directly in the Python file (and we modify your Python file when updating the expect test.)

The general recipe for how to use this is as follows:

  1. Write your test and use assertExpectedInline() instead of a normal assertEqual. Leave the expected argument blank with an empty string:

    self.assertExpectedInline(some_func(), "")
    
  2. Run your test. It should fail, and you get an error message about accepting the output with EXPECTTEST_ACCEPT=1

  3. Rerun the test with EXPECTTEST_ACCEPT=1. Now the previously blank string literal will contain the expected value of the test.

    self.assertExpectedInline(some_func(), "my_value")
    

A minimal working example

# test.py
import unittest
from expecttest import TestCase

class TestStringMethods(TestCase):
    def test_split(self):
        s = 'hello world'
        self.assertExpectedInline(str(s.split()), """""")

if __name__ == '__main__':
    unittest.main()

Run EXPECTTEST_ACCEPT=1 python test.py , and the content in triple-quoted string will be automatically updated.

For people who use pytest:

from expecttest import assert_expected_inline

def test_split():
    s = 'hello world'
    assert_expected_inline(str(s.split()), """""")

Run EXPECTTEST_ACCEPT=1 pytest test.py , and the content in triple-quoted string will be automatically updated.

Some tips and tricks