test_ok2/changelog
Nicholas Devenish 1a8d9bf254 Let approx() work on more generic sequences
approx() was updated in 9f3122fe to work better with numpy arrays,
however at the same time the requirements were tightened from
requiring an Iterable to requiring a Sequence - the former being
tested only on interface, while the latter requires subclassing or
registration with the abc.

Since the ApproxSequence only used __iter__ and __len__ this commit
reduces the requirement to only what's used, and allows unregistered
Sequence-like containers to be used.

Since numpy arrays qualify for the new criteria, reorder the checks so
that generic sequences are checked for after numpy arrays.
2018-11-18 20:01:11 +00:00
..
4327.bugfix.rst Let approx() work on more generic sequences 2018-11-18 20:01:11 +00:00
README.rst Separate deprecations and removals in the CHANGELOG 2018-09-13 14:02:01 -03:00
_template.rst Update CHANGELOG template to put issue links at the start of entries 2018-07-07 11:02:33 -03:00

README.rst

This directory contains "newsfragments" which are short files that contain a small **ReST**-formatted
text that will be added to the next ``CHANGELOG``.

The ``CHANGELOG`` will be read by users, so this description should be aimed to pytest users
instead of describing internal changes which are only relevant to the developers.

Make sure to use full sentences with correct case and punctuation, for example::

    Fix issue with non-ascii messages from the ``warnings`` module.

Each file should be named like ``<ISSUE>.<TYPE>.rst``, where
``<ISSUE>`` is an issue number, and ``<TYPE>`` is one of:

* ``feature``: new user facing features, like new command-line options and new behavior.
* ``bugfix``: fixes a reported bug.
* ``doc``: documentation improvement, like rewording an entire session or adding missing docs.
* ``deprecation``: feature deprecation.
* ``removal``: feature removal.
* ``vendor``: changes in packages vendored in pytest.
* ``trivial``: fixing a small typo or internal change that might be noteworthy.

So for example: ``123.feature.rst``, ``456.bugfix.rst``.

If your PR fixes an issue, use that number here. If there is no issue,
then after you submit the PR and get the PR number you can add a
changelog using that instead.

If you are not sure what issue type to use, don't hesitate to ask in your PR.

``towncrier`` preserves multiple paragraphs and formatting (code blocks, lists, and so on), but for entries
other than ``features`` it is usually better to stick to a single paragraph to keep it concise. You can install
``towncrier`` and then run ``towncrier --draft``
if you want to get a preview of how your change will look in the final release notes.