)
actual = result.output
# Again, the contents are checked in a different test, so only look for colors.
- self.assertIn("\033[1;37m", actual)
+ self.assertIn("\033[1m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[36m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[32m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[31m", actual)
actual = result.output
# We check the contents of the diff in `test_expression_diff`. All
# we need to check here is that color codes exist in the result.
- self.assertIn("\033[1;37m", actual)
+ self.assertIn("\033[1m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[36m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[32m", actual)
self.assertIn("\033[31m", actual)
node = black.lib2to3_parse("def fn(a, /, b): ...")
self.assertEqual(black.get_features_used(node), {Feature.POS_ONLY_ARGUMENTS})
+ def test_get_features_used_for_future_flags(self) -> None:
+ for src, features in [
+ ("from __future__ import annotations", {Feature.FUTURE_ANNOTATIONS}),
+ (
+ "from __future__ import (other, annotations)",
+ {Feature.FUTURE_ANNOTATIONS},
+ ),
+ ("a = 1 + 2\nfrom something import annotations", set()),
+ ("from __future__ import x, y", set()),
+ ]:
+ with self.subTest(src=src, features=features):
+ node = black.lib2to3_parse(src)
+ future_imports = black.get_future_imports(node)
+ self.assertEqual(
+ black.get_features_used(node, future_imports=future_imports),
+ features,
+ )
+
def test_get_future_imports(self) -> None:
node = black.lib2to3_parse("\n")
self.assertEqual(set(), black.get_future_imports(node))
call_args[0].lower() == str(pyproject_path).lower()
), "Incorrect config loaded."
+ def test_for_handled_unexpected_eof_error(self) -> None:
+ """
+ Test that an unexpected EOF SyntaxError is nicely presented.
+ """
+ with pytest.raises(black.parsing.InvalidInput) as exc_info:
+ black.lib2to3_parse("print(", {})
+
+ exc_info.match("Cannot parse: 2:0: EOF in multi-line statement")
+
+ def test_equivalency_ast_parse_failure_includes_error(self) -> None:
+ with pytest.raises(AssertionError) as err:
+ black.assert_equivalent("a«»a = 1", "a«»a = 1")
+
+ err.match("--safe")
+ # Unfortunately the SyntaxError message has changed in newer versions so we
+ # can't match it directly.
+ err.match("invalid character")
+ err.match(r"\(<unknown>, line 1\)")
+
class TestCaching:
def test_cache_broken_file(self) -> None: