18

I am trying to do a simple test in Python using 'unittest', to see if a class throws an exception if it gets an unsuitable input for the constructor. The class looks like this:

class SummaryFormula:
    def __init__( self, summaryFormula):
        self.atoms = {}
        for atom in re.finditer( "([A-Z][a-z]{0,2})(\d*)", summaryFormula):
            symbol = atom.group(1)
            count = atom.group(2)

            if pocet != "":
                self.atoms[ symbol] = int(count)
            else:
                self.atoms[ symbol] = 1

My test is the following:

    class ConstructorTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
      def testEmptyString(self):
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula(), "testtest")

    if __name__ == '__main__':
      unittest.main()

All I want is the test to fail, meaning that the exception of unsuitable input for constructor is not handled.

Instead, I get an error: __init__() takes exactly two arguments (1 given).

What am I missing? What is the second argument I should specify?

Also, what type of Error should I use to handle exception that an input not matchable by my regexp was passed to the constructor?

3
  • I can't run the code directly as there is syntax error near for loop. Can you correct that. Commented Oct 6, 2010 at 21:53
  • I thought the indentation around for loop was not correct Commented Oct 6, 2010 at 21:56
  • @pyfunc: Sorry about that. Corrected it. Commented Oct 6, 2010 at 21:58

5 Answers 5

31

A more Pythonic way is to use with command (added in Python 2.7):

with self.assertRaises(SomeException):
    do_something()

Documentation: assertRaises

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1 Comment

This is actually pretty great. Nice and clean.
27

assertRaises is a little confusing, because you need to give it the callable, not an expression that makes the call.

Change your code to:

self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula, "testtest")

In your code, you are invoking the constructor yourself, and it raises an exception about not having enough arguments. Instead, you need to give assertRaises the callable (ukol1.SummaryFormula), and the arguments to call it with ("testtest"). Then it can call it, catching and checking for exceptions.

Comments

13

That’s because your class requires a parameter while instantiating the object.

While you are passing

ukol1.SummaryFormula()

You should have been passing the parameter summaryFormula to it.

ukol1.SummaryFormula(someSummaryFormula)

Also the confusion is because your class name is SummaryFormula and the parameter that you pass to __init__ is also SummaryFormula

Or it should this be

self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula, "testtest")

2 Comments

This was of course the first thing that I tried, but if I use self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula("testtest"), "testtest"), I get other error: SummaryFormula instance gas no call method. And isn't it that you specify the arguments passed to the function tested in assertRaises as a third (or fourth, fifth, ...) argument of the assertRaises() function?
@Tomas Novotny : I did add the second change while I was trying to run your code. Repeating it here : self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula, "testtest")
8

Since none of the other answers point on how you can use the context that encapsulates the code that causes the exception, here's how you can do that.

with self.assertRaises(ValueError) as ctx:
    <some code that throws an exception>

expected_msg = 'foo_bar_baz'
self.assertEquals(ctx.exception.message, expected_msg)

Attributes of interest in this unittest.case._AssertRaisesContext, are:

  • exception
  • expected
  • expected_regexp
  • failureException

1 Comment

ctx.exception does not have attribute 'message' for me, but self.assertEquals(str(ctx.exception), expected_msg) works.
4

A more-generic alternate format is

args=['testtest']
kwargs = {}
self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula, *args, **kwargs)

This is useful if your constructor is polymorphic and you want to loop over a list of different ways of miswriting the arguments, e.g.:

arg_lists = [
    ['testtest'],
    ['anothertest'],
    ['YAT'],
]
for args in arg_lists:
    self.assertRaises(TypeError, ukol1.SummaryFormula, *args)

Comments

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