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ensure-1.0.3


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توضیحات

Literate BDD assertions in Python with no magic
ویژگی مقدار
سیستم عامل -
نام فایل ensure-1.0.3
نام ensure
نسخه کتابخانه 1.0.3
نگهدارنده []
ایمیل نگهدارنده []
نویسنده Andrey Kislyuk
ایمیل نویسنده kislyuk@gmail.com
آدرس صفحه اصلی https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure
آدرس اینترنتی https://pypi.org/project/ensure/
مجوز Apache Software License
ensure: Literate assertions in Python ===================================== *ensure* is a set of simple assertion helpers that let you write more expressive, literate, concise, and readable Pythonic code for validating conditions. It's inspired by `should.js <https://github.com/shouldjs/should.js>`_, `expect.js <https://github.com/Automattic/expect.js>`_, and builds on top of the `unittest/JUnit assert helpers <http://docs.python.org/2/library/unittest.html#assert-methods>`_. If you use Python 3, you can use *ensure* to enforce your **function signature annotations**: see `PEP 3107 <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3107/>`_ and the @ensure_annotations decorator below. Because *ensure* is fast, is a standalone library (not part of a test framework), doesn't monkey-patch anything or use DSLs, and doesn't use the assert statement (which is liable to be turned off with the ``-O`` flag), it can be used to validate conditions in production code, not just for testing (though it certainly works as a BDD test utility library). Aside from better looking code, a big reason to use *ensure* is that it provides more consistent, readable, and informative error messages when things go wrong. See `Motivation and Goals <https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure#motivation-and-goals>`_ for more. Installation ------------ :: pip install ensure Synopsis -------- .. code-block:: python from ensure import ensure ensure(1).is_an(int) ensure({1: {2: 3}}).equals({1: {2: 3}}).also.contains(1) ensure({1: "a"}).has_key(1).whose_value.has_length(1) ensure.each_of([{1: 2}, {3: 4}]).is_a(dict).of(int).to(int) ensure(int).called_with("1100101", base=2).returns(101) ensure(dict).called_with(1, 2).raises(TypeError) check(1).is_a(float).or_raise(Exception, "An error happened: {msg}. See http://example.com for more information.") In Python 3: .. code-block:: python from ensure import ensure_annotations @ensure_annotations def f(x: int, y: float) -> float: return x+y See **More examples** below. Notes ~~~~~ The ``ensure`` module exports the ``Ensure`` class and its convenience instance ``ensure``. Instances of the class are callable, and the call will reset the contents that the instance is inspecting, so you can reuse it for many checks (as seen above). The class raises ``EnsureError`` (a subclass of ``AssertionError``) by default. There are several ways to **chain clauses**, depending on the grammatical context: ``.also``, ``.which``, and ``.whose_value`` are available per examples below. Raising custom exceptions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can pass a callable or exception class as the ``error_factory`` keyword argument to ``Ensure()``, or you can use the ``Check`` class or its convenience instance ``check()``. This class behaves like ``Ensure``, but does not raise errors immediately. It saves them and chains the methods ``otherwise()``, ``or_raise()`` and ``or_call()`` to the end of the clauses. .. code-block:: python from ensure import check check("w00t").is_an(int).or_raise(Exception) check(1).is_a(float).or_raise(Exception, "An error happened: {msg}. See http://example.com for more information.") check("w00t").is_an(int).or_raise(MyException, 1, 2, x=3, y=4) .. code-block:: python def build_fancy_exception(original_exception): return MyException(original_exception) check("w00t").is_an(int).otherwise(build_fancy_exception) check("w00t").is_an(int).or_call(build_fancy_exception, *args, **kwargs) More examples ------------- .. code-block:: python ensure({1: {2: 3}}).is_not_equal_to({1: {2: 4}}) ensure(True).does_not_equal(False) ensure(1).is_in(range(10)) ensure(True).is_a(bool) ensure(True).is_(True) ensure(True).is_not(False) .. code-block:: python ensure(["train", "boat"]).contains_one_of(["train"]) ensure(range(8)).contains(5) ensure(["spam"]).contains_none_of(["eggs", "ham"]) ensure("abcdef").contains_some_of("abcxyz") ensure("abcdef").contains_one_or_more_of("abcxyz") ensure("abcdef").contains_all_of("acf") ensure("abcd").contains_only("dcba") ensure("abc").does_not_contain("xyz") ensure([1, 2, 3]).contains_no(float) ensure(1).is_in(range(10)) ensure("z").is_not_in("abc") ensure(None).is_not_in([]) ensure(dict).has_attribute('__contains__').which.is_callable() ensure({1: "a", 2: "b", 3: "c"}).has_keys([1, 2]) ensure({1: "a", 2: "b"}).has_only_keys([1, 2]) .. code-block:: python ensure(1).is_true() ensure(0).is_false() ensure(None).is_none() ensure(1).is_not_none() ensure("").is_empty() ensure([1, 2]).is_nonempty().also.has_length(2) ensure(1.1).is_a(float).which.equals(1.10) ensure(KeyError()).is_an(Exception) ensure({x: str(x) for x in range(5)}).is_a_nonempty(dict).of(int).to(str) ensure({}).is_an_empty(dict) ensure(None).is_not_a(list) .. code-block:: python import re ensure("abc").matches("A", flags=re.IGNORECASE) ensure([1, 2, 3]).is_an_iterable_of(int) ensure([1, 2, 3]).is_a_list_of(int) ensure({1, 2, 3}).is_a_set_of(int) ensure({1: 2, 3: 4}).is_a_mapping_of(int).to(int) ensure({1: 2, 3: 4}).is_a_dict_of(int).to(int) ensure({1: 2, 3: 4}).is_a(dict).of(int).to(int) ensure(10**100).is_numeric() ensure(lambda: 1).is_callable() ensure("abc").has_length(3) ensure("abc").has_length(min=3, max=8) ensure(1).is_greater_than(0) ensure(1).exceeds(0) ensure(0).is_less_than(1) ensure(1).is_greater_than_or_equal_to(1) ensure(0).is_less_than_or_equal_to(0) ensure(1).is_positive() ensure(1.1).is_a_positive(float) ensure(-1).is_negative() ensure(-1).is_a_negative(int) ensure(0).is_nonnegative() ensure(0).is_a_nonnegative(int) ensure([1,2,3]).is_sorted() .. code-block:: python ensure("{x} {y}".format).called_with(x=1, y=2).equals("1 2") ensure(int).called_with("1100101", base=2).returns(101) ensure("{x} {y}".format).with_args(x=1, y=2).is_a(str) with ensure().raises(ZeroDivisionError): 1/0 with ensure().raises_regex(NameError, "'w00t' is not defined"): w00t See `complete API documentation <https://kislyuk.github.io/ensure/#module-ensure>`_. Enforcing function annotations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Use the ``@ensure_annotations`` decorator to enforce `function signature annotations <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3107/>`_: .. code-block:: python from ensure import ensure_annotations @ensure_annotations def f(x: int, y: float) -> float: return x+y f(1, 2.3) :: >>> 3.3 .. code-block:: python f(1, 2) :: >>> ensure.EnsureError: Argument y to <function f at 0x109b7c710> does not match annotation type <class 'float'> Compare this runtime type checking to compile-time checking in `Mypy <http://www.mypy-lang.org/>`_ and `type hinting in PEP 484/Python 3.5+ <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/>`_. Motivation and goals ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Many BDD assertion libraries suffer from an excess of magic, or end up having to construct statements that don't parse as English easily. *ensure* is deliberately kept simple to avoid succumbing to either issue. The `source <https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure/blob/master/ensure/__init__.py>`_ is easy to read and extend. Work remains to make error messages raised by *ensure* even more readable, informative, and consistent. Going forward, ability to introspect exceptions to extract structured error information will be a major development focus. You will be in control of how much information is presented in each error, which context it's thrown from, and what introspection capabilities the exception object will have. The original use case for *ensure* is as an I/O validation helper for API endpoints, where the client needs to be sent a very clear message about what went wrong, some structured information (such as an HTTP error code and machine-readable reference to a failing element) may need to be added, and some information may need to be hidden from the client. To further improve on that, we will work on better error translation, marshalling, message formatting, and schema validation helpers. Authors ------- * Andrey Kislyuk * Harrison Metzger Links ----- * `Project home page (GitHub) <https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure>`_ * `Documentation <https://kislyuk.github.io/ensure/>`_ * `Package distribution (PyPI) <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ensure>`_ Bugs ~~~~ Please report bugs, issues, feature requests, etc. on `GitHub <https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure/issues>`_. License ------- Licensed under the terms of the `Apache License, Version 2.0 <http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0>`_. .. image:: https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure/workflows/CI/badge.svg :target: https://github.com/kislyuk/ensure/actions .. image:: https://codecov.io/github/kislyuk/ensure/coverage.svg?branch=master :target: https://codecov.io/github/kislyuk/ensure?branch=master .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/ensure.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ensure .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/ensure.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ensure


نیازمندی

مقدار نام
>=1.11.0 six
- coverage
- ruff


زبان مورد نیاز

مقدار نام
>=3.6 Python


نحوه نصب


نصب پکیج whl ensure-1.0.3:

    pip install ensure-1.0.3.whl


نصب پکیج tar.gz ensure-1.0.3:

    pip install ensure-1.0.3.tar.gz