[1.6.x] Fixed #21027 -- Updated tutorial 5 docs to link to management shell command page.
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@ -19,8 +19,8 @@ Testing operates at different levels. Some tests might apply to a tiny detail
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examine the overall operation of the software (*does a sequence of user inputs
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on the site produce the desired result?*). That's no different from the kind of
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testing you did earlier in :doc:`Tutorial 1 </intro/tutorial01>`, using the
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shell to examine the behavior of a method, or running the application and
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entering data to check how it behaves.
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:djadmin:`shell` to examine the behavior of a method, or running the
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application and entering data to check how it behaves.
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What's different in *automated* tests is that the testing work is done for
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you by the system. You create a set of tests once, and then as you make changes
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@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ the ``Poll``'s ``pub_date`` field is in the future (which certainly isn't).
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You can see this in the Admin; create a poll whose date lies in the future;
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you'll see that the ``Poll`` change list claims it was published recently.
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You can also see this using the shell::
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You can also see this using the :djadmin:`shell`::
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>>> import datetime
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>>> from django.utils import timezone
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@ -153,8 +153,8 @@ Since things in the future are not 'recent', this is clearly wrong.
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Create a test to expose the bug
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-------------------------------
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What we've just done in the shell to test for the problem is exactly what we
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can do in an automated test, so let's turn that into an automated test.
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What we've just done in the :djadmin:`shell` to test for the problem is exactly
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what we can do in an automated test, so let's turn that into an automated test.
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A conventional place for an application's tests is in the application's
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``tests.py`` file; the testing system will automatically find tests in any file
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@ -318,11 +318,11 @@ The Django test client
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Django provides a test :class:`~django.test.client.Client` to simulate a user
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interacting with the code at the view level. We can use it in ``tests.py``
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or even in the shell.
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or even in the :djadmin:`shell`.
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We will start again with the shell, where we need to do a couple of things that
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won't be necessary in ``tests.py``. The first is to set up the test environment
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in the shell::
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We will start again with the :djadmin:`shell`, where we need to do a couple of
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things that won't be necessary in ``tests.py``. The first is to set up the test
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environment in the :djadmin:`shell`::
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>>> from django.test.utils import setup_test_environment
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>>> setup_test_environment()
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@ -421,7 +421,7 @@ runserver, loading the site in your browser, creating ``Polls`` with dates in
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the past and future, and checking that only those that have been published are
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listed. You don't want to have to do that *every single time you make any
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change that might affect this* - so let's also create a test, based on our
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shell session above.
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:djadmin:`shell` session above.
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Add the following to ``polls/tests.py``::
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