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I have this simple program in Python (hello.py):

name=input()
print("Hello " + name)

As simple as that, no classes, no functions, no nothing, just an input and the corresponding output.

My aim is just to create test_hello.py, a test file for hello.py. I spend a few hours searching on the internet, but I only found unit tests for functions or methods but not for a simple input and output program. Any clue? Thank you a lot in advance!

Note: Stack overflow suggests that there is an answer: How to assert output with nosetest/unittest in python? But the two questions are very different, there aren't functions in my code and there is an input(). In the "answer" suggested the code is inside a function and there is no input().

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    Is there a specific reason? and how would you check the expected output? It should, for example, return something or write the output to the file.
    – mad_
    Aug 31, 2018 at 17:06
  • 2
    Might be better to write a bash script for this
    – Mitch
    Aug 31, 2018 at 17:08
  • I just don't see how you are going to import or call this to run in your test as it is not function, you would have to code hello.py to run in the test code, v a predicted outcome which you could do with a function, but you don't want to use functions, hmm Aug 31, 2018 at 23:22

2 Answers 2

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Finally, I came up with the solution:

import unittest
import os
import subprocess

class TestHello(unittest.TestCase):

    def test_case1(self):
        input = "Alan"
        expected_output = "Hello Alan"
        with os.popen("echo '" + input + "' | python hello.py") as o:
            output = o.read()
        output = output.strip() # Remove leading spaces and LFs
        self.assertEqual(output, expected_output)

    def test_case2(self):
        input = "John"
        expected_output = "Hello John"
        with os.popen("echo '" + input + "' | python hello.py") as o:
            output = o.read()
        output = output.strip() # Remove leading spaces and LFs
        self.assertEqual(output, expected_output)

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

I have two test cases: "Alan" must print "Hello Alan" and John must print "Hello John".

Thanks guys for your clues!

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I really suggest using classes or functions, but if you insisted then you can try to use it in a subprocess and capture the output

this might help

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