import sys
import unittest
from contextlib import contextmanager
+from dataclasses import replace
from functools import partial
from pathlib import Path
from typing import Any, Iterator, List, Optional, Tuple
assert actual == expected
+class FormatFailure(Exception):
+ """Used to wrap failures when assert_format() runs in an extra mode."""
+
+
def assert_format(
source: str,
expected: str,
safety guards so they don't just crash with a SyntaxError. Please note this is
separate from TargetVerson Mode configuration.
"""
+ _assert_format_inner(
+ source, expected, mode, fast=fast, minimum_version=minimum_version
+ )
+
+ # For both preview and non-preview tests, ensure that Black doesn't crash on
+ # this code, but don't pass "expected" because the precise output may differ.
+ try:
+ _assert_format_inner(
+ source,
+ None,
+ replace(mode, preview=not mode.preview),
+ fast=fast,
+ minimum_version=minimum_version,
+ )
+ except Exception as e:
+ text = "non-preview" if mode.preview else "preview"
+ raise FormatFailure(
+ f"Black crashed formatting this case in {text} mode."
+ ) from e
+ # Similarly, setting line length to 1 is a good way to catch
+ # stability bugs. But only in non-preview mode because preview mode
+ # currently has a lot of line length 1 bugs.
+ try:
+ _assert_format_inner(
+ source,
+ None,
+ replace(mode, preview=False, line_length=1),
+ fast=fast,
+ minimum_version=minimum_version,
+ )
+ except Exception as e:
+ raise FormatFailure(
+ "Black crashed formatting this case with line-length set to 1."
+ ) from e
+
+
+def _assert_format_inner(
+ source: str,
+ expected: Optional[str] = None,
+ mode: black.Mode = DEFAULT_MODE,
+ *,
+ fast: bool = False,
+ minimum_version: Optional[Tuple[int, int]] = None,
+) -> None:
actual = black.format_str(source, mode=mode)
- _assert_format_equal(expected, actual)
+ if expected is not None:
+ _assert_format_equal(expected, actual)
# It's not useful to run safety checks if we're expecting no changes anyway. The
# assertion right above will raise if reality does actually make changes. This just
# avoids wasted CPU cycles.
- if not fast and source != expected:
+ if not fast and source != actual:
# Unfortunately the AST equivalence check relies on the built-in ast module
# being able to parse the code being formatted. This doesn't always work out
# when checking modern code on older versions.