When making superficial changes to a Python script (changing code-style/formatting/whitespace, for example), it's useful to be able to check if any logical changes were (accidentally) made to the code.
For C/C++ I generate assembler and diff it (not 100% fool proof with platform specific ifdef's
, but still useful). While I could binary diff a pyc
file, this isn't so helpful in seeing what exactly changed.
Is there a convenient way to get some human-readable text output of the AST that can be checked for changes?
This may of course raise some false positives (replacing str % bar
with str.format(bar)
, for example), but I am still interested to know if some convenient ways exist.
Background info
Since it was suggested to just run tests.
Here is some background on why I ask this question.
This code has no tests and it's unlikely to ever have 100% test coverage since it happens to be build-system utility scripts. In theory, we could spend time to add a test suite and find ways to enable tests to run on different platforms (monkey patch sys.platform
or run continuous integration on all supported platforms in a VM...) but we simply can't justify spending this kind of effort at the moment.
Also, it's possible that you might want to clean up test code itself!