PythonExtra/tests/basics/slice_indices.py
Nicko van Someren 4c93955b7b py/objslice: Add support for indices() method on slice objects.
Instances of the slice class are passed to __getitem__() on objects when
the user indexes them with a slice.  In practice the majority of the time
(other than passing it on untouched) is to work out what the slice means in
the context of an array dimension of a particular length.  Since Python 2.3
there has been a method on the slice class, indices(), that takes a
dimension length and returns the real start, stop and step, accounting for
missing or negative values in the slice spec.  This commit implements such
a indices() method on the slice class.

It is configurable at compile-time via MICROPY_PY_BUILTINS_SLICE_INDICES,
disabled by default, enabled on unix, stm32 and esp32 ports.

This commit also adds new tests for slice indices and for slicing unicode
strings.
2019-12-28 23:55:15 +11:00

28 lines
611 B
Python

# Test builtin slice indices resolution
# A class that returns an item key
class A:
def __getitem__(self, idx):
return idx
# Make sure that we have slices and .indices()
try:
A()[2:5].indices(10)
except:
print("SKIP")
raise SystemExit
print(A()[:].indices(10))
print(A()[2:].indices(10))
print(A()[:7].indices(10))
print(A()[2:7].indices(10))
print(A()[2:7:2].indices(10))
print(A()[2:7:-2].indices(10))
print(A()[7:2:2].indices(10))
print(A()[7:2:-2].indices(10))
print(A()[2:7:2].indices(5))
print(A()[2:7:-2].indices(5))
print(A()[7:2:2].indices(5))
print(A()[7:2:-2].indices(5))