11

The Problem:

We've been using nose test runner for quite a while.

From time to time, I see our tests having eq_() calls:

eq_(actual, expected)

instead of the common:

self.assertEqual(actual, expected)

The question:

Is there any benefit of using nose.tools.eq_ as opposed to the standard unittest framework's assertEqual()? Are they actually equivalent?


Thoughts:

Well, for one, eq_ is shorter, but it has to be imported from nose.tools which makes the tests dependent on the test runner library which can make it more difficult to switch to a different test runner, say py.test. On the other hand, we are also using @istest, @nottest and @attr nose decorators a lot.

1 Answer 1

6
+50

They aren't equivalent to unittest.TestCase.assertEqual.

nose.tools.ok_(expr, msg=None)

Shorthand for assert. Saves 3 whole characters!

nose.tools.eq_(a, b, msg=None)

Shorthand for assert a == b, "%r != %r" % (a, b)

https://nose.readthedocs.org/en/latest/testing_tools.html#nose.tools.ok_

These docs are however slightly misleading. If you check the source you'll see eq_ actually is:

def eq_(a, b, msg=None):
    if not a == b:
        raise AssertionError(msg or "%r != %r" % (a, b))

https://github.com/nose-devs/nose/blob/master/nose/tools/trivial.py#L25

This is pretty close to the base case of assertEqual:

def _baseAssertEqual(self, first, second, msg=None):
    """The default assertEqual implementation, not type specific."""
    if not first == second:
        standardMsg = '%s != %s' % _common_shorten_repr(first, second)
        msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
        raise self.failureException(msg)  # default: AssertionError

https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/9b5ef19c937bf9414e0239f82aceb78a26915215/Lib/unittest/case.py#L805

However, as hinted by the docstring and function name, assertEqual has the potential of being type-specific. This is something you lose with eq_ (or assert a == b, for that matter). unittest.TestCase has special cases for dicts, lists, tuples, sets, frozensets and strs. These mostly seem to facilitate prettier printing of error messages.

But assertEqual is a class member of TestCase, so it can only be used in TestCases. nose.tools.eq_ can be used wherever, like a simple assert.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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