diff -r cc3f7ef1072e Lib/test/test_int.py --- a/Lib/test/test_int.py Wed Dec 26 08:22:00 2012 -0600 +++ b/Lib/test/test_int.py Thu Dec 27 19:05:19 2012 +0200 @@ -222,23 +222,23 @@ self.assertEqual(int('1z141z5', 36), 4294967297) def test_no_args(self): - self.assertEquals(int(), 0) + self.assertEqual(int(), 0) def test_keyword_args(self): # Test invoking int() using keyword arguments. - self.assertEquals(int(x=1.2), 1) - self.assertEquals(int('100', base=2), 4) - self.assertEquals(int(x='100', base=2), 4) + self.assertEqual(int(x=1.2), 1) + self.assertEqual(int('100', base=2), 4) + self.assertEqual(int(x='100', base=2), 4) # For example, PyPy 1.9.0 raised TypeError for these cases because it # expects x to be a string if base is given. @support.cpython_only def test_base_arg_with_no_x_arg(self): - self.assertEquals(int(base=6), 0) + self.assertEqual(int(base=6), 0) # Even invalid bases don't raise an exception. - self.assertEquals(int(base=1), 0) - self.assertEquals(int(base=1000), 0) - self.assertEquals(int(base='foo'), 0) + self.assertEqual(int(base=1), 0) + self.assertEqual(int(base=1000), 0) + self.assertEqual(int(base='foo'), 0) def test_int_base_limits(self): """Testing the supported limits of the int() base parameter.""" @@ -279,8 +279,8 @@ for x in values: msg = 'x has type %s' % type(x).__name__ - self.assertEquals(int(x), 100, msg=msg) - self.assertEquals(int(x, 2), 4, msg=msg) + self.assertEqual(int(x), 100, msg=msg) + self.assertEqual(int(x, 2), 4, msg=msg) def test_string_float(self): self.assertRaises(ValueError, int, '1.2')