Server IP : 209.38.156.173 / Your IP : 216.73.216.122 [ Web Server : Apache/2.4.52 (Ubuntu) System : Linux lakekumayuhotel 5.15.0-136-generic #147-Ubuntu SMP Sat Mar 15 15:53:30 UTC 2025 x86_64 User : root ( 0) PHP Version : 8.1.2-1ubuntu2.22 Disable Function : NONE Domains : 2 Domains MySQL : OFF | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : ON | Python : OFF | Sudo : ON | Pkexec : ON Directory : /proc/thread-self/root/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/hamcrest/library/integration/ |
Upload File : |
from typing import Any from hamcrest.core.helpers.wrap_matcher import wrap_matcher from hamcrest.core.matcher import Matcher from hamcrest.core.string_description import tostring __author__ = "Chris Rose" __copyright__ = "Copyright 2011 hamcrest.org" __license__ = "BSD, see License.txt" __unittest = True class EqualityWrapper(object): def __init__(self, matcher: Matcher) -> None: self.matcher = matcher def __eq__(self, obj: Any) -> bool: return self.matcher.matches(obj) def __str__(self) -> str: return repr(self) def __repr__(self) -> str: return tostring(self.matcher) def match_equality(matcher: Matcher) -> EqualityWrapper: """Wraps a matcher to define equality in terms of satisfying the matcher. ``match_equality`` allows Hamcrest matchers to be used in libraries that are not Hamcrest-aware. They might use the equality operator:: assert match_equality(matcher) == object Or they might provide a method that uses equality for its test:: library.method_that_tests_eq(match_equality(matcher)) One concrete example is integrating with the ``assert_called_with`` methods in Michael Foord's `mock <http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/mock/>`_ library. """ return EqualityWrapper(wrap_matcher(matcher))