I am please to announce the availability of the first major release of the "baseline" package.
This tool streamlines creation and maintenance of tests which compare string output against a baseline. It offers a mechanism to compare a string against a baselined copy and update the baselined copy to match the new value when a mismatch occurs. The update process includes a manual step to facilitate a review of the change before acceptance. The tool uses multi-line string format for string baselines to improve readability for human review. Docs: https://baseline.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ PyPi: https://pypi.org/project/baseline/ Repo: https://github.com/dmgass/baseline License: MIT With Regards, Dan Gass (dan.gass at gmail) *********** Changes *********** The following summarizes changes since the previous "beta" release (the major revision bump signifies backwards incompatible changes): + Improve baseline update when multiple values compared against the same baseline. Generate a single multi-line baseline with headers between the various alternative values. This facilitates updating the baseline again. + Support Python 3.8. Previously, when run using 3.8, the baseline update tool misplaced baseline updates in the first triple quoted string found above the baseline. (Python 3.8 stack frames now report the line number of the first line in a statement rather than the last.) + Change behavior of ``Baseline`` to use raw strings when updating baselines when possible to improve readability. + Deprecate ``RawBaseline`` since ``Baseline`` now incorporates its behavior. *********** Quick Start *********** Create an empty baseline with a triple quoted multi-line string. Place the ending triple quote on a separate line and indent it to the level you wish the string baseline update to be indented to. Add a compare of the string being tested to the baseline string. Then save the file as ``fox.py``: .. code-block:: python from baseline import Baseline expected = Baseline(""" """) test_string = """THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG.""" assert test_string == expected Run ``fox.py`` and observe that the ``assert`` raises an exception since the strings are not equal. Because the comparison failed, the tool located the triple quoted baseline string in the source file and updated it with the mis-compared value. When the interpreter exited, the tool saved the updated source file but changed the file name to ``fox.update.py``: .. code-block:: python from baseline import Baseline expected = Baseline(""" THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG. """) test_string = """THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG.""" assert test_string == expected After reviewing the change with your favorite file differencing tool, accept the change by either manually overwriting the original file or use the ``baseline`` command line tool to scan the directory for updated scripts and accept them: .. code-block:: shell $ python -m baseline * Found updates for: fox.py Hit [ENTER] to update, [Ctrl-C] to cancel fox.update.py -> fox.py Run ``fox.py`` again and observe the ``assert`` does not raise an exception nor is a source file update generated. If in the future the test value changes, the ``assert`` will raise an exception and cause a new source file update to be generated. Simply repeat the review and acceptance step and you are back in business! https://baseline.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ -- Python-announce-list mailing list -- python-announce-list@python.org To unsubscribe send an email to python-announce-list-le...@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman3/lists/python-announce-list.python.org/ Support the Python Software Foundation: http://www.python.org/psf/donations/