RETIRED, further work has moved to Debian project infrastructure
steadymark | ||
.travis.yml | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.pip | ||
setup.py |
Steady Mark
Turning your github readme files into python test suites since 2012
Steady Mark was created for python developers that love Github and markdown.
How it works:
Write your documentation using github-flavored markdown, surround your snippets with python code blocks and steadymark will automatically find and run them, if there is a header preceeding your python snippet it will be used as title for your test.
Advantages:
- Add test coverage to your app/library while documenting it
- Never have old malfunctional examples on your project's main page in github
- It uses misaka which is a python-binding of sundown, the markdown engine that github uses in itself
Example
unicode.lower transforms string into lowercase
assert u"FOOBAR".lower() == "foobar"
python can add numbers
assert (2 + 2) == 4, 'oops baby'
Start using steady mark now!
This is the code for the example above, copy and paste in you python project right now and start keeping your documentation up-to-date with the code.
# My project name
`version 0.1`
## unicode.lower transforms string into lowercase
```python
assert u"FOOBAR".lower() == "foobar"
```
## python can add numbers
```python
assert (2 + 2) == 5, 'oops baby'
```
Just run with:
$ steadymark README.md
Steadymark tests itself 👍
from steadymark import version
assert version == '0.1.2'