This issue tracker has been migrated to GitHub, and is currently read-only.
For more information, see the GitHub FAQs in the Python's Developer Guide.

Author Keith.Chewning
Recipients Keith.Chewning
Date 2014-12-18.22:27:04
SpamBayes Score -1.0
Marked as misclassified Yes
Message-id <1418941624.73.0.497940658508.issue23087@psf.upfronthosting.co.za>
In-reply-to
Content
If I %paste this code into an ipython shell the test passes. If this is saved to a file DictTest.py and run with ./DictTest.py -m the test fails. with the error

name 'keys' is not defined

If the variable keys is made global, as is suggested in the comment, the test passes with both methods of execution. Is there a scoping issue with executing this as a script?

I am using version: '3.4.1 |Anaconda 2.1.0 (64-bit)| (default, Sep 10 2014, 17:10:18) \n[GCC 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-1)]'

import unittest

class DictTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def test_dict_comprehension(self):
        code = """
d = {'a':1, 'b':2, 'c':3, 'd':4}
# global keys # UNCOMMENT FOR TEST TO PASS
keys = ['a', 'd']
items = d.items()
nd = {k: v for k, v in items if k in keys}
print('>>> ' + str(nd))
"""
        try:
            exec(code)
        except Exception as e:
            self.assertTrue(False, "Exec ERROR>>> %s" % e)

def main():
    dt = DictTest()    
    dt.test_dict_comprehension()

if  __name__ =='__main__':main()
History
Date User Action Args
2014-12-18 22:27:04Keith.Chewningsetrecipients: + Keith.Chewning
2014-12-18 22:27:04Keith.Chewningsetmessageid: <1418941624.73.0.497940658508.issue23087@psf.upfronthosting.co.za>
2014-12-18 22:27:04Keith.Chewninglinkissue23087 messages
2014-12-18 22:27:04Keith.Chewningcreate