vote up 0 vote down star

I'm using assert multiple times throughout multiple scripts, I was wondering if anyone has any suggestions on a better way to achieve this instead of the functions I have created below.

def assert_validation(expected, actual, type='', message=''):

    if type == '==':

        assert expected == actual, 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '!=':

        assert expected != actual, 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '<=':

        assert expected <= actual, 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '>=':

        assert expected >= actual, 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)



def assert_str_validation(expected, actual, type='', message=''):

    if type == '==':

        assert str(expected) == str(actual), 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '!=':

        assert str(expected) != str(actual), 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '<=':

        assert str(expected) <= str(actual), 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)

    elif type == '>=':

        assert str(expected) >= str(actual), 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' %(expected, actual, message)
flag
Refactor! _ – pianoman Jul 24 at 17:49
Seriously though, can you explain the context? I'm confused as to why you have cases for <= and >= as well as !=. – pianoman Jul 24 at 17:53
What's wrong with the assert statement? – S.Lott Jul 24 at 18:20
Did your browser do that when you pasted, or do you really double-space your code? – Glenn Maynard Jul 24 at 19:19
the browser did this, next time i'll clean it up. – otface Jul 24 at 21:06

1 Answer

vote up 6 vote down

Well this is certainly shorter... can you really not just use assert expected == actual or whatever in the scripts themselves?

def assert_validation(expected, actual, type='', message='', trans=(lambda x: x)):
    m = { '==': (lambda e, a: e == a),
          '!=': (lambda e, a: e != a),
          '<=': (lambda e, a: e <= a),
          '>=': (lambda e, a: e >= a), }
    assert m[type](trans(expected), trans(actual)), 'Expected: %s, Actual: %s, %s' % (expected, actual, message)

def assert_str_validation(expected, actual, type='', message=''):
    assert_validation(expected, actual, type, message, trans=str)
link|flag
Should be +1 for the first sentence. +1 for actually solving the problem and +1 for minimizing the performance hit. Unfortuneatly I can upvote it only once :) – wuub Jul 24 at 18:10
assert_str_validation should be assert_validation(str(expected), str(actual), ...) and the str parameter is unused and can be removed. – Glenn Maynard Jul 24 at 19:18
In fact it should be assert m[type](str(expected), str(actual))..., and str in assert_validation could be better named, but that's just nitpicking. – wuub Jul 24 at 19:24
Yep, fixed both of those. str was renamed to trans (for transform) and is now actually used. – Steve Losh Jul 24 at 19:32

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.