I am on a learning stage of using python as a tool for software QA.
I wrote the next simple test in order to find the letter 'a' in a text file number matrix. problem is that the test fails even though the expect equals to what i got.
Why is that? Can you tell me what am I doing wrong?
test script:
fin = open("abc.txt", "r")
arr_fin = []
for line in fin:
arr_fin.append(line.split())
print arr_fin
for row in arr_fin:
arr_fin_1 = " ".join('{0:4}'.format(i or " ") for i in row)
print arr_fin_1
def find_letter(x, arr_fin_1):
"""
>>> find_letter('a', arr_fin_1)
97
"""
t=ord(x) #exchange to letter's ASCII value
for i in arr_fin_1:
if i==x:
print t
return;
def _test():
import doctest
doctest.testmod()
if __name__ == "__main__":
_test()
error message:
Expected:
97
Got:
97
**********************************************************************
1 items had failures:
1 of 1 in __main__.find_letter
***Test Failed*** 1 failures.
You've got an extra space after the 97 - if you remove it, your test should run fine.
This:
Makes your function return
None
.Did you mean
return t
?Besides that, IMHO
doctest
tests are meant to be self-contained. This is something the user should see in your documentation and understand without context. In your example, you're using a module-localarr_fin_1
object which is completely opaque to the user. It's better to define it in the doctest before thefind_letter
call to provide a self-contained example.