[Tim] >> The other error here (which Jeremy also saw on Linux) came from >> running 3 tests in a particular order. Here I'm running them with >> Jeremy's locale hack in test_logging reverted (there is no failure >> when that hack is in place): >> >> C:\Code\python\PCbuild>python ../lib/test/regrtest.py test_strptime >> test_logging >> test_time >> test_strptime test_logging >> test_time >> test test_time failed -- Traceback (most recent call last): >> File "C:\Code\python\lib\test\test_time.py", line 49, in >> test_strptime self.fail('conversion specifier: %r failed.' % >> format) File "C:\Code\python\lib\unittest.py", line 260, in fail >> raise self.failureException, msg >> AssertionError: conversion specifier: ' %c' failed. >> >> 2 tests OK. >> 1 test failed: >> test_time >> [Brett C.] > OK. This is where running: > > >>> import time > >>> time.strftime("%c") > >>> import _strptime > >>> _strptime.TimeRE()['c'] > > can help me try to diagnose this (I can't reproduce this under OS X). > This will give me what strftime is spitting out and what regex > strptime would be using to match against it. After reverting Jeremy's hack to test_logging, and hacking regrtest.py to stop doing sys.exit(): C:\Code\python\PCbuild>python -i ../lib/test/regrtest.py test_strptime test_logging test_time test_strptime test_logging test_time test test_time failed -- Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Code\python\lib\test\test_time.py", line 49, in test_strptime self.fail('conversion specifier: %r failed.' % format) File "C:\Code\python\lib\unittest.py", line 260, in fail raise self.failureException, msg AssertionError: conversion specifier: ' %c' failed. 2 tests OK. 1 test failed: test_time >>> import time >>> time.strftime("%c") '07/22/2003 05:44:01 PM' >>> import _strptime >>> _strptime.TimeRE()['c'] '(?P<m>1[0-2]|0[1-9]|[1-9])/(?P<d>3[0-1]|[1-2]\\d|0[1-9]| [1-9]| [1-9])/(?P<y>\\d\\d)\\s*(?P<H>2[0-3]|[0-1]\\d|\\d) :(?P<M>[0-5]\\d|\\d):(?P<S>6[0-1]|[0-5]\\d|\\d)' >>> Now the same thing with Jeremy's test_logging hack restored: C:\Code\python\PCbuild>python -i ../lib/test/regrtest.py test_strptime test_logging test_time test_strptime test_logging test_time All 3 tests OK. >>> import time >>> time.strftime("%c") '07/22/03 17:47:26' >>> import _strptime >>> _strptime.TimeRE()['c'] '(?P<m>1[0-2]|0[1-9]|[1-9])/(?P<d>3[0-1]|[1-2]\\d|0[1-9]| [1-9]| [1-9])/(?P<y>\\d\\d)\\s*(?P<H>2[0-3]|[0-1]\\d|\\d) :(?P<M>[0-5]\\d|\\d):(?P<S>6[0-1]|[0-5]\\d|\\d)' >>> The regexp appears to be the same, but strftime's result has switched from (apparently) 12-hour + AM/PM time to 24-hour time.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4