--- Steven Bethard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Have you tried py.test? > > http://codespeak.net/py/dist/test.html > > I've heard good things about it, but haven't gotten > around to trying it > yet. Here's a two-line test suite from the page > above: > > def test_answer(): > assert 42 == 43 >
Changed the subject line. Nope, I haven't. I'm a tremendous advocate of unit testing, but I've never felt compelled to try out other libraries, because I work mostly on private code now, so the following-standard-practices-to-benefit-from-familiarity argument doesn't carry much weight with me, and also because I find it easy enough to do things on a roll-your-own basis. YMMV, of course. I have slowly introduced unit testing into my own work environment, with some success. We don't use a 3rd party testing framework, but here's my roll-your-own approach: 1) For flat-out failures, we just fail with a traceback right away. We don't bother to capture stats on how many tests failed. If one test fails, that's enough to clue in a developer that he/she broke something. 2) We don't use assertions very often, but rather just diff the output files to the GOLD files. This may eventually stop to scale, but it hasn't yet. 3)We have a little trickery to override imports, etc., as 99.99% of our code was never written with unit testing in mind, but I still want to regression test it. 4) We have quite a few mock-ish objects, mainly relating to simulating I/O situations. ____________________________________________________________________________________Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell. http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list