from unittest import TestCase from django_clickhouse.compatibility import namedtuple class NamedTupleTest(TestCase): def test_defaults(self): TestTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c'), defaults={'c': 3}) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 3), tuple(TestTuple(1, b=2))) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 4), tuple(TestTuple(1, 2, 4))) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 4), tuple(TestTuple(a=1, b=2, c=4))) def test_exceptions(self): TestTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c'), defaults={'c': 3}) with self.assertRaises(TypeError): TestTuple(b=1, c=4) with self.assertRaises(TypeError): TestTuple(1, 2, 3, c=4) def test_different_defaults(self): # Test that 2 tuple type defaults don't affect each other TestTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c'), defaults={'c': 3}) OtherTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c'), defaults={'c': 4}) t1 = TestTuple(a=1, b=2) t2 = OtherTuple(a=3, b=4) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 3), tuple(t1)) self.assertTupleEqual((3, 4, 4), tuple(t2)) def test_defaults_cache(self): # Test that 2 tuple instances don't affect each other's defaults TestTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c'), defaults={'c': 3}) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 4), tuple(TestTuple(a=1, b=2, c=4))) self.assertTupleEqual((1, 2, 3), tuple(TestTuple(a=1, b=2))) def test_equal(self): TestTuple = namedtuple('TestTuple', ('a', 'b', 'c')) t1 = TestTuple(1, 2, 3) t2 = TestTuple(1, 2, 3) self.assertEqual(t1, t2) self.assertEqual((1, 2, 3), t1)