From db837659ea056f9b78d5be77c9f412a15e0d8fef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: sobolevn Date: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 16:03:00 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] gh-115450: Fix direct invocation of `test_desctut` --- Lib/test/test_descrtut.py | 22 +++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py b/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py index 13e3ea41bdb76c..f097c4e7300baa 100644 --- a/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py +++ b/Lib/test/test_descrtut.py @@ -39,16 +39,16 @@ def merge(self, other): Here's the new type at work: >>> print(defaultdict) # show our type - + >>> print(type(defaultdict)) # its metatype >>> a = defaultdict(default=0.0) # create an instance >>> print(a) # show the instance {} >>> print(type(a)) # show its type - + >>> print(a.__class__) # show its class - + >>> print(type(a) is a.__class__) # its type is its class True >>> a[1] = 3.25 # modify the instance @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ def merge(self, other): >>> print(sortdict(a.__dict__)) {'default': -1000, 'x1': 100, 'x2': 200} >>> -""" +""" % {'modname': __name__} class defaultdict2(dict): __slots__ = ['default'] @@ -264,19 +264,19 @@ def merge(self, other): ... print("classmethod", cls, y) >>> C.foo(1) - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 >>> c = C() >>> c.foo(1) - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 >>> class D(C): ... pass >>> D.foo(1) - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 >>> d = D() >>> d.foo(1) - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 This prints "classmethod __main__.D 1" both times; in other words, the class passed as the first argument of foo() is the class involved in the @@ -292,18 +292,18 @@ class passed as the first argument of foo() is the class involved in the >>> E.foo(1) E.foo() called - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 >>> e = E() >>> e.foo(1) E.foo() called - classmethod 1 + classmethod 1 In this example, the call to C.foo() from E.foo() will see class C as its first argument, not class E. This is to be expected, since the call specifies the class C. But it stresses the difference between these class methods and methods defined in metaclasses (where an upcall to a metamethod would pass the target class as an explicit first argument). -""" +""" % {'modname': __name__} test_5 = """