Of course you can make the function with a print statement more unit testable without completely changing it's semantics!
You pass in an outputstream and use that as the target for print.
Then your unit test can create its own stream and test the content of the stream whilst production code can pass in standard out.
That way you don't completely change the semantic meaning of the code.
And once again that GPT function is useless. It is identical to list(range()) and it doesn't do what the first function does. Anyone can make anything more unit testable if it doesn't have to do the same thing.
Bro, dependency injection and mocking is the same thing as segregating your function from IO. Your replacing io calls to stdout with io calls to something else. But that doesn't make your code unit testable.
The function is still touching io. You gonna test it with another function that touches io? That defeats the point of the definition of unit testability.
> and doesn't do what the first function does.
Are you serious? You mock your output streams with hacky monkey patching your function ALSO stops doing what it originally does. It's essentially black magic globals that mutate your program... very bad practice.
Chatgpt here just didn't write the obvious io component of the code because it would be freaking pedantic. The full code would include a function that prints lists composed with a function that produces lists. The composition allows part of the program to be testable while leaving the io part of it not testable. For the original program NONE of it was testable.
Your Monkey patching here would be replaced by different io functions. You want to change the output stream? then you change the IO function. Compose the list producer with another IO function. Play type Tetris and you can recompose your list producing function with all kinds of modular io. The point it you separated the core logic away from IO thereby making it more modular and more testable.
None of the io functions are testable via unit tests, that is the point. That is the definition of the most basic form of testing... Unit tests.
You literally HAVE to change your code in order to make it unit testable. If your code is throwing shit to io and retrieving values from io then none of your code is unit testable. You're at the integration test level and at this level things become hacky and more complicated. Your tests not have external dependencies like state, the operating system and you have to run hacks like your monkey patch.
Where ever you work or whatever you've been doing if you haven't been doing what I described then you (and your work buddies) haven't been testing your code via unit tests.
That's fine, whatever works bro. But chatGPT knows the common parlance for testing and unit testing, and it did exactly the correct thing.
Your interpretation of what testing is the thing that is strange and off here.
I'm sorry, I clearly haven't explained myself well as otherwise you would not have wasted a huge amount of text tying yourself in knots based clearly on a mistaken apprehension of what I was saying.
For clarity I reproduce the original function you gave and then I present what the change I am suggesting is
def cool_function(x):
for i in range(x):
print(i)
My change
def cool_function(x, output_stream=sys.stdout):
for i in range(x):
print(i, file=output_stream)
Does it now become clear what I am suggesting? My new function can be used as a 1-for-1 replacement for the old function, no code of the system needs changed as the default value provided to the new variable ensures semantically identical operation without changing any further code. Yet it is now unit testable
So I've made the code unit testable, kept semantics completely identical and not had to worrty about any weird IO concerns that you have. No monkey patching, no weird file IO, no bizarelly re-implemnting list(range(x)).
> I'm sorry, I clearly haven't explained myself well as otherwise you would not have wasted a huge amount of text tying yourself in knots based clearly on a mistaken apprehension of what I was saying.
No need to apologize. This is a discussion. No one did anything wrong.
>For clarity I reproduce the original function you gave and then I present what the change I am suggesting is
This is called dependency injection and it's a valid way of segregating IO away from pure logic. Although this pattern is popular among old school OOP programmers it's getting out of vogue due to the complexity of it all. You used a python trick here of default values, but typically dependency injection changes the function signature and ups the complexity of the code by a lot. Let me show you the full output of the code that chatgpt was implying:
#unit testable code (without using dependency injection tricks)
def cool_function(x: int) -> None:
IO_function(logic_function(x))
def logic_function(x: int) -> List[int]:
return [i for i in range(x)]
def IO_function(x: Any) -> None:
print(x)
def test_output():
assert logic_function(4) == [i for i in range(4)]
Chatgpt only gave you logic_function, because IO_function is sort of obvious.. it's just "print" (I only wrapped print in "IO_function" to keep things clear, typically you won't define that function). But basically the full complete code would be to recompose IO with logic. You now have two components one of which is testable.
As a side note you will see it's actually an improvement to the code. It's simpler, no dependency injection, no confusing function type signature and a much simpler test case. The other thing that must be noted is the modularity.
Making tests unit testable in this way allows for your logic to be portable. What if I want to repurpose cool_function to output it's logic to another function? In your example you don't have the components to do that, it's harder for your case as you'd have to create another component for injection.
In short not only did chatGPT produce A correct answer. But it produced the better answer compared with your dependency injection. That being said your dependency injection is valid BUT you were not correct in saying that chatGPT's answer was worse or incorrect.
3 functions is better. Think about it. Do people write all their stuff in one big function? No. Better to compose higher level functions with smaller ones rather then write one big monolith like you did. The more modular something is the better.
Also IO_function is there for illustration purposes. Technically it's just wrapping print with a name so you can understand the intent. In reality you just use the regular print here without a wrapper, so in actuality only two functions are defined.
>The job of ChatGPT was to make cool_function unit testable. You haven't done it.
It did. By giving it a return value. Just like you did by giving it a new input value.
>You still have cool_function using side effect generating code hitting the actual IO system.
Yeah but one component of cool_function is pure and you can unit test that. Cool function itself can never be tested because it generates no output, you test the unit components of cool function. That's the point of unit tests.
>Genuinely the worst unit test I have ever seen written, on a poor form per line basis, absolute bananas. If you don't understand why [i for i in range(4)] is bad in a unit test and [0,1,2,3] is correct then I need you to walk away from the computer.
Let's just talk about it like adults. Just tell me what exactly about it makes you think it's bad?
Most likely it's some pedantic stylistic philosophy you have? I'm thinking you only want to test literals? Perhaps you prefer [0,1,2,3]? Am I right on the money?
Logic potentially has errors so you don't put logic in your test code. Makes sense, but who cares. For trivial shit it's fine. While in this case the logic in the test is identical to the function, typically 'logic_function' represents something significantly more complex and the list comprehension so I could care less if I'm not following the strictest form of testing. The comprehension is just something akin to an alias shortcut I prefer to use over writing out a massive literal. For the toy example the test is pointless because the logic is identical but typically it's fine to use range as an alias to represent a sequence of numbers.
Someone who strictly follows these stylistic rules without seeing intent or having the ability to bend the rules is just an inflexible pedantic programmer. It's not good to boast about it either by telling other people to walk away from a computer. That's just rude.
Of course you can make the function with a print statement more unit testable without completely changing it's semantics!
You pass in an outputstream and use that as the target for print.
Then your unit test can create its own stream and test the content of the stream whilst production code can pass in standard out.
That way you don't completely change the semantic meaning of the code.
And once again that GPT function is useless. It is identical to list(range()) and it doesn't do what the first function does. Anyone can make anything more unit testable if it doesn't have to do the same thing.