How do you use the @patch decorator to patch the built-in input() function?
For example, here's a function in question.py that I'd like to test, which contains a call to input():
def query_yes_no(question, default="yes"):
""" Adapted from http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3041986/python-command-line-yes-no-input """
valid = {"yes": True, "y": True, "ye": True, "no": False, "n": False}
if default is None:
prompt = " [y/n] "
elif default == "yes":
prompt = " [Y/n] "
elif default == "no":
prompt = " [y/N] "
else:
raise ValueError("invalid default answer: '%s'" % default)
while True:
sys.stdout.write(question + prompt)
choice = input().lower()
if default is not None and choice == '':
return valid[default]
elif choice in valid:
return valid[choice]
else:
sys.stdout.write("Please respond with 'yes' or 'no' "
"(or 'y' or 'n').\n")
Here's my test, which gives me the error "ImportError: No module named 'builtins'":
import unittest
from unittest.mock import patch
import question
class TestQueryYesNo(unittest.TestCase):
@patch('__builtins__.input.return_value', 'y')
def test_query_y(self):
answer = question.query_yes_no("Blah?")
self.assertTrue(answer)
Or use Mock's
return_value
attribute. I couldn't get it to work as a decorator, but here's how to do it with a context manager:__builtin__ module is renamed to builtins in Python 3. Replace as follow:
UPDATE
input
has an optional parameter. updated the code to accept the optional parameter.For Python 2.x:
worked for me.