For an empty Queryset, I'd go simply for using none
as keithhackbarth has already stated.
However, to mock a Queryset that will return a list of values, I prefer to use a Mock with a spec
of the Model's manager. As an example (Python 2.7 style - I've used the external Mock library), here's a simple test where the Queryset is filtered and then counted:
from django.test import TestCase
from mock import Mock
from .models import Example
def queryset_func(queryset, filter_value):
"""
An example function to be tested
"""
return queryset.filter(stuff=filter_value).count()
class TestQuerysetFunc(TestCase):
def test_happy(self):
"""
`queryset_func` filters provided queryset and counts result
"""
m_queryset = Mock(spec=Example.objects)
m_queryset.filter.return_value = m_queryset
m_queryset.count.return_value = 97
result = func_to_test(m_queryset, '__TEST_VALUE__')
self.assertEqual(result, 97)
m_queryset.filter.assert_called_once_with(stuff='__TEST_VALUE__')
m_queryset.count.assert_called_once_with()
However, to fulfil the question, instead of setting a return_value
for count
, this could easily be adjusted to be a list
of model instances returned from all
.
Note that chaining is handled by setting the filter
to return the mocked queryset:
m_queryset.filter.return_value = m_queryset
This would need to be applied for any queryset methods used in the function under test, e.g. exclude
, etc.