I was wondering the other day how other pythonistas incorporate doctests into their coding practices. I have acquired the habit of keeping an editor open in one window and an ipython instance open in another and then using something similar to the format of the module below. In this case, I incorporate a switch in the _test function whereby covered=False means the doctest is still being written (and is easy to test using the command line) and covered=True means it is somewhat complete and ready to be incorporated into a test suite.
This still seems to me to be somewhat hackish and convoluted (execing into globals() and all), and one wonders if there are better coding workflows out there that specifically incorporate doctests as the primary means of testing. Thanks in advance for any feedback AK </module> ''' Simple doctest of a module usage:: >>> fib(0) 0 >>> fib(1) 1 >>> fib(10) 55 >>> fib(15) 610 ''' def fib(n): if n == 0: return 0 elif n == 1: return 1 else: return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) def _test(covered=False): import doctest if covered: doctest.testmod() else: exec doctest.script_from_examples(__doc__) in globals() if __name__ == '__main__': _test() </module> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list