3

I have two classes:

class A(object):
    def get_something(self):
        return 1

class B(A):
    pass

and when I try to patch A.get_something in tests it fails.

from some_module.myclasses import B

...
def test_something(self):
    with patch('some_module.myclasses.A.get_something', return_value=2):
        self.assertEqual(B().get_something(), 2)

What's wrong here?

0

2 Answers 2

3

Found out. I have to patch imported A

from some_module.myclasses import A, B

...
def test_something(self):
    with patch.object(A, 'get_something', return_value=2):
        self.assertEqual(B().get_something(), 2)
1

What you are doing is correct but if it isn't working, it may be because of other modules importing A or B into their namespace and not using the same package as what you patched.

I have seen this happen when you do something like this:

mypackage/
    __init__.py
    mod.py

Python modules

mypackage/mod.py

class A(object):
    def get_something(self):
        return 1

mypackage/__init__.py

from mod import *

Then mypackage.mod.A may be imported as mypackage.A but your patching mypackage.mod.A

1
  • Nope, I'm not importing it in __init__.py. But thanks for suggestion
    – syabro
    Aug 28, 2015 at 16:34

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