* Put a 'reset' color in front of the highlighting
When doing the highlighting, some lexers will not set the initial color
explicitly, which may lead to the red from the errors being propagated
to the start of the expression
* Add syntactic highlighting to the error explanations
This updates the various error reporting to highlight python code when
displayed, to increase readability and make it easier to understand
The normal default pretty printer is not great when objects are nested
and it can get hard to read the diff.
Instead, provide a pretty printer that behaves more like when json get
indented, which allows for smaller, more meaningful differences, at
the expense of a slightly longer diff.
This does not touch the other places where the pretty printer is used,
and only updated the full diff one.
The left/right operands produced when `verbose > 1` should not contain newlines, because they are used to
build the `summary` string. The `assertrepr_compare` function returns a list of lines, and the summary is one of those lines and should not contain newlines itself.
Fix#9742
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Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
* manual fixes after configuration update
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu>
`TerminalWriter`, imported recently from `py`, contains its own
incomplete wcwidth (`char_with`/`get_line_width`) implementation. The
`TerminalReporter` also needs this, but uses the external `wcwidth`
package.
This commit brings the `TerminalWriter` implementation up-to-par with
`wcwidth`, moves to implementation to a new file `_pytest._io.wcwidth`
which is used everywhere, and removes the dependency.
The differences compared to the `wcwidth` package are:
- Normalizes the string before counting.
- Uses Python's `unicodedata` instead of vendored Unicode tables. This
means the data corresponds to the Python's version Unicode version
instead of the `wcwidth`'s package version.
- Apply some optimizations.
Works around:
_____ ERROR collecting testing/io/test_saferepr.py _____
src/_pytest/python.py:502: in _importtestmodule
mod = self.fspath.pyimport(ensuresyspath=importmode)
.venv38/lib/python3.8/site-packages/py/_path/local.py:701: in pyimport
__import__(modname)
<frozen importlib._bootstrap>:991: in _find_and_load
???
<frozen importlib._bootstrap>:975: in _find_and_load_unlocked
???
<frozen importlib._bootstrap>:671: in _load_unlocked
???
src/_pytest/assertion/rewrite.py:136: in exec_module
source_stat, co = _rewrite_test(fn, self.config)
src/_pytest/assertion/rewrite.py:288: in _rewrite_test
co = compile(tree, fn, "exec", dont_inherit=True)
E File "…/Vcs/pytest/testing/io/test_saferepr.py", line 45
E None()
E ^
E SyntaxError: 'NoneType' object is not callable; perhaps you missed a comma?
This causes INTERNALERRORs with pytest-django, which uses
`pytest.fail` (derived from `BaseException`) to prevent DB access, when
pytest then tries to e.g. display the `repr()` for a Django `QuerySet`
etc.
Ref: https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-django/pull/776