In unittest, I can setUp
variables in a class and then the methods of this class can chose whichever variable it wants to use...
class test_class(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.varA = 1
self.varB = 2
self.varC = 3
self.modified_varA = 2
def test_1(self):
do_something_with_self.varA, self.varB
def test_2(self):
do_something_with_self_modified_varA, self.varC
So in unittest, it was easy to put bunch of tests together that could go under one class and then use many different variables (varA
and varB
) for different methods. In pytest, I created a fixture in conftest.py
instead of a class in unittest, like this...
@pytest.fixture(scope="module")
def input1():
varA = 1
varB = 2
return varA, varB
@pytest.fixture(scope="module")
def input2():
varA = 2
varC = 3
return varA, varC
I feed this input1 and input2 to my functions in a different file (let's say test_this.py) for two different functions. Here are the questions based on information above...
Since I can't just declare local variables in
conftest.py
as I can't simply import this file. Is there a better way of declaring different variables here that can be used in different functions intest_this.py
? I have five different configurations in my actual testing for these variables, defining that many different fixtures in conftest.py and use them as function argument in five different functions in test_this.py sounds painful, I would rather go back to unittest class structure, define my variables and pick and choose what I want.Should I just declare global variables in
test_this.py
and use them in the functions the way I want ? Seems a bit not pythonic. This variables are only used by the functions in this file.Let's say I have
test_that.py
andtest_them.py
as well. If I have some shared variables between these different files, how would I declare them ? just create a file called variables.py in the directory where all these test files are and do an import whenever I need ? This way I can keep all data in a separate.Is it my impression that pytest discourages using a class to organize your functions? Every example I read online, it all seem to employ bunch of functions with fixtures only. What is a configuration of defining class and methods and organize tests in pytest?
I have a test scenario where I have to use result of one function into another. With pytest, I have an assert that is at the end of a function not a return so I won't be able to use this function as a fixture. How do I accomplish this? I know this is not a good practice that my one test relies on another but is there a work around?