OK, my first official Python question. And fair warning - it's probably not a good one. Her it goes: is it possible to unit test code that doesn't use functions? Let's say, you have a file with contents of
a = int(input())
print(a * 2)
can that be (easily) unit tested?
(I'm aware it's not a very practical question in reality, you'd define a function, import that, then test that one for input/output. This is more curiosity-based, than anything)
That wouldn't be terribly difficult to test. All you need to do is run it as a subprocess, feed it input via stdin and then verify the stdout matches your expectations
OK, but when I said "easy" I meant some built-in to a unit test library. So, the answer I was after is a "no". Although I do recognise it's not exactly hard to test, either.
I was curious, since I just started a Python course (finished lecture 1) and they are just teaching something like the above - take input from stdin, then produce the result in stdout. It never really occurred to me to test something like that before. I tried to look up how to do it and it struck me that I didn't know how to do that even in languages I do use.
I did figure that you can just run it as a process and treat it as a function (with newline separated inputs, then stdout is the return value) but I wondered if there was something that'd do it for me. For the record, I just ended up doing
def fn(x):
return x * 2
a = int(input())
print(fn(a))
I'm not sure the idea of unit tests at that level would be easy to reason about. Almost all code you'd want in production is going to be wrapped in a function anyway and probably the most significant thing you'd want for that particular case is whether it throws an exception if it isn't provided with a numerical input (i.e. having the casting inside the function)