Python: unittest

module for test-driven development in Python

Using unittest to test your Python code

Test-driven development involves writing “unit tests” for each individual unit of code: typically each function definition.

Unit tests, or “test cases” as they are sometimes called, are specified by:

Then, if actual==expected, the test cases passes, otherwise it fails.

In the case of tests involving decimals, we might instead assert that the actual and expected are almost equal, meaning that the absolute value of the difference between them is less than some small value—or to say it another way, that they are equal within a certain number of decimal places.

One way to write these test cases in Python is with a module that we can import called unittest.

As an example, consider this simple function that converts Fahrenheit to Celsius, stored in tempFuncs.py

# tempFuncs.py
def ftoc(fTemp):
   return (fTemp - 32)*(5.0/9.0)

To write tests for this, we can put the following into a file called test_tempFuncs.py. (Note that we don’t have to call the file test_ followed by the name of the file we are testing, but that is a handy naming convention to follow.)

Following the code block, we provide an explanation one line at a time.

# test_tempFuncs.py

import unittest
from tempFuncs import ftoc

class Test_tempFuncs(unittest.TestCase):

   def test_ftoc_1(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(212.0),100.0)

   def test_ftoc_2(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(32.0),0.0)

   def test_ftoc_3(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(-40.0),-40.0)

   def test_ftoc_4(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(67.0),19.4444,places=3)

if __name__=="__main__":
    unittest.main()

Line-by-line explanation

We now explain the contents of test_tempFuncs.py one or two lines at a time.

# test_tempFuncs.py

This line is merely a comment with the name of the file, for identification purposes.

import unittest

We must import unittest to be able to use the features provided in this module for unit testing.

from tempFuncs import ftoc

This line imports the function we want to test, ftoc, directly from the file tempFuncs.py. We could also have written import tempFuncs, but then we’d have to write tempFuncs.ftoc each time we wanted to use the ftoc function.

class Test_tempFuncs(unittest.TestCase):

This first word on the line, class, indicates that what follows is a class definition. The name of the class is Test_tempFuncs, and the part in parenthesis, unittest.TestCase indicates the parent class of this one. This class, Test_tempFuncs will inherit some features from its parent, that makes it function properly as a TestCase.

The concept of a class is one that we’ll get into more deeply later when we discuss object-oriented programming, and which you’ll explore much more deeply when you take CSE 8A or 11 in Java.

For now, it is enough to know two things—although this is vastly oversimplified explanation and far from the full truth about what a class is:

In this case, all of the related function definitions are the ones that immediately follow the line that starts with class ..., and are indented under it. The class ends with the blank line just before the if test, which is not indented. The fact that the if test is not indented indicates that it is the first line that is NOT part of the class.

Now we turn to the first function definition that is part of the class. Note that for every function that you write for testing purposes, the function name should start with “test_”:

   def test_ftoc_1(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(212.0),100.0)

In Python, each function that is part of class typically has, as its first parameter, a special value called self. For now, it is enough to know that this special value has to be there, and it gives us access to some of the special feature we “inherit” from our parent.

So, when we want to check whether ftoc(212.0) converts the Farenheit value 212.0 correctly to the Celsius value 100.0, we write:

      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(212.0),100.0)

We put this inside the function called test_ftoc_1, and we put that function definition inside a class that inherits from unittest.TestCase.

We then add two more similar function definitions, for two additional test cases. Each one needs its own separate name.

   def test_ftoc_2(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(32.0),0.0)

   def test_ftoc_3(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(-40.0),-40.0)

Up until now, we expect the values to be either exactly equal, or very close to exactly equal. The assertAlmostEqual function, by default, compares the absolute value of the difference to seven decimal places. If we want to compare to fewer or more, though we can override the default, as shown in the last function definition of our sample code:

   def test_ftoc_4(self):
      self.assertAlmostEqual(ftoc(67.0),19.4444,places=3)

The class is now finished, and we have just two more lines of code. This first line of code is peculiar, but you’ll see it a lot, and eventually get used to it:

if __name__=="__main__":
    unittest.main()

The if test here is indeed strange. What is __name__? and what is "__main__"? The answer is that this is a bit of a hack, a kludge—that is, a sort of inelegant solution to a problem. In Python, a file can be run in at least two different ways:

  1. It can be “directly run”—that is, a user asked for this file by name to be run by selecting the “Run” menu option in idle3, for example, or by typing python thisFile.py at the unix command line.

  2. It can be “indirectly run” by being imported into another Python file that is directly run. (That can also be several layers deep: it may be imported by a file, that is imported by a file, that is imported by a file … that is directly run.)

Sometimes we want to know which one is happening, and run some code ONLY in the case where the file is being “directly run”.

That is what the line of code `if name == “main” does.

Any time a file is being directly run, the __name__ variable gets set to the special value "__main__".

Any other time, it is set to the name of the module, which is the name of the Python file without the .py on the end (e.g. for foo.py, name is set to foo.

So in the end, the if test below just means “do this code only if this file is being directly run; if its being imported into another file, skip this part.”

if __name__=="__main__":
    unittest.main()

But what about the line unittest.main()? That line is the part that actually runs the tests. The main() function is part of the unittest module. What it does is look for any and all classes that inherit from unittest.TestCase that it can find, and runs every single test case from every single one of them. The code that prints out how many tests pass and fail is part of that unittest.main() function.