Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-ui-color.py @ 51731:92845af308b4
typing: narrow the scope of some recent disabled import warnings
These comments were added in 39e2b2d062c1, but had the effect of changing the
known type to `Any`, which cascaded through a few function signatures. Just
ignore the import error instead.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 24 Jul 2024 18:17:00 -0400 |
parents | ca7bde5dbafb |
children |
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import os from mercurial import ( dispatch, ui as uimod, ) from mercurial.utils import stringutil # ensure errors aren't buffered testui = uimod.ui() testui.pushbuffer() testui.writenoi18n(b'buffered\n') testui.warnnoi18n(b'warning\n') testui.write_err(b'error\n') print(stringutil.pprint(testui.popbuffer(), bprefix=True).decode('ascii')) # test dispatch.dispatch with the same ui object hgrc = open(os.environ["HGRCPATH"], 'wb') hgrc.write(b'[extensions]\n') hgrc.write(b'color=\n') hgrc.close() ui_ = uimod.ui.load() ui_.setconfig(b'ui', b'formatted', b'True') # we're not interested in the output, so write that to devnull ui_.fout = open(os.devnull, 'wb') # call some arbitrary command just so we go through # color's wrapped _runcommand twice. def runcmd(): dispatch.dispatch(dispatch.request([b'version', b'-q'], ui_)) runcmd() print("colored? %s" % (ui_._colormode is not None)) runcmd() print("colored? %s" % (ui_._colormode is not None))