from django.utils import six
__test__ = {"API_TEST": r"""
# Some checks of the doctest output normalizer.
# Standard doctests do fairly
>>> import json
>>> from django.utils.xmlutils import SimplerXMLGenerator
>>> from django.utils.six import StringIO
>>> def produce_json():
... return json.dumps(['foo', {'bar': ('baz', None, 1.0, 2), 'whiz': 42}])
>>> def produce_xml():
... stream = StringIO()
... xml = SimplerXMLGenerator(stream, encoding='utf-8')
... xml.startDocument()
... xml.startElement("foo", {"aaa" : "1.0", "bbb": "2.0"})
... xml.startElement("bar", {"ccc" : "3.0"})
... xml.characters("Hello")
... xml.endElement("bar")
... xml.startElement("whiz", {})
... xml.characters("Goodbye")
... xml.endElement("whiz")
... xml.endElement("foo")
... xml.endDocument()
... return stream.getvalue()
>>> def produce_xml_fragment():
... stream = StringIO()
... xml = SimplerXMLGenerator(stream, encoding='utf-8')
... xml.startElement("foo", {"aaa": "1.0", "bbb": "2.0"})
... xml.characters("Hello")
... xml.endElement("foo")
... xml.startElement("bar", {"ccc": "3.0", "ddd": "4.0"})
... xml.endElement("bar")
... return stream.getvalue()
# JSON output is normalized for field order, so it doesn't matter
# which order json dictionary attributes are listed in output
>>> produce_json()
'["foo", {"bar": ["baz", null, 1.0, 2], "whiz": 42}]'
>>> produce_json()
'["foo", {"whiz": 42, "bar": ["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]'
# XML output is normalized for attribute order, so it doesn't matter
# which order XML element attributes are listed in output
>>> produce_xml()
'\nHelloGoodbye'
>>> produce_xml()
'\nHelloGoodbye'
>>> produce_xml_fragment()
'Hello'
>>> produce_xml_fragment()
'Hello'
"""}
if six.PY2:
__test__["API_TEST"] += """
>>> def produce_long():
... return 42L
>>> def produce_int():
... return 42
# Long values are normalized and are comparable to normal integers ...
>>> produce_long()
42
# ... and vice versa
>>> produce_int()
42L
"""