speedtest-cli/simplejson/tests/test_bitsize_int_as_string.py

74 lines
2.2 KiB
Python

from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
class TestBitSizeIntAsString(TestCase):
# Python 2.5, at least the one that ships on Mac OS X, calculates
# 2 ** 31 as 0! It manages to calculate 1 << 31 correctly.
values = [
(200, 200),
((1 << 31) - 1, (1 << 31) - 1),
((1 << 31), str(1 << 31)),
((1 << 31) + 1, str((1 << 31) + 1)),
(-100, -100),
((-1 << 31), str(-1 << 31)),
((-1 << 31) - 1, str((-1 << 31) - 1)),
((-1 << 31) + 1, (-1 << 31) + 1),
]
def test_invalid_counts(self):
for n in ['foo', -1, 0, 1.0]:
self.assertRaises(
TypeError,
json.dumps, 0, int_as_string_bitcount=n)
def test_ints_outside_range_fails(self):
self.assertNotEqual(
str(1 << 15),
json.loads(json.dumps(1 << 15, int_as_string_bitcount=16)),
)
def test_ints(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, int_as_string_bitcount=31)),
)
def test_lists(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
val = [val, val]
expect = [expect, expect]
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, int_as_string_bitcount=31)))
def test_dicts(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
val = {'k': val}
expect = {'k': expect}
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, int_as_string_bitcount=31)))
def test_dict_keys(self):
for val, _ in self.values:
expect = {str(val): 'value'}
val = {val: 'value'}
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, int_as_string_bitcount=31)))