The ansi_x3.4_1968 encoding is an alias for ascii, but isn't known in

Python 2.1.3.  However it's required by the email tests suite, so poke
it into the encodings aliases if it's missing.  The is apparently the
approved API for doing so.

Now we can remove the hexversion shortcircuits in the test suite.
This commit is contained in:
Barry Warsaw 2002-09-30 15:23:17 +00:00
parent a2a07bce89
commit d20b66537c
2 changed files with 9 additions and 12 deletions

View file

@ -1470,12 +1470,6 @@ class TestIdempotent(TestEmailBase):
self._idempotent(msg, text)
def test_more_rfc2231_parameters(self):
# BAW: What to do about this. Python 2.1 doesn't know about the
# charset ansi-x3.4-1968, so this test will fail. Do we teach Python
# about that charset, and if so, where (maybe Charset.py)? For now,
# just skip this test if we aren't at least in Python 2.2.
if sys.hexversion < 0x20200000:
return
msg, text = self._msgobj('msg_33.txt')
self._idempotent(msg, text)
@ -2258,12 +2252,6 @@ Do you like this message?
""")
def test_rfc2231_get_content_charset(self):
# BAW: What to do about this. Python 2.1 doesn't know about the
# charset ansi-x3.4-1968, so this test will fail. Do we teach Python
# about that charset, and if so, where (maybe Charset.py)? For now,
# just skip this test if we aren't at least in Python 2.2.
if sys.hexversion < 0x20200000:
return
eq = self.assertEqual
msg = self._msgobj('msg_32.txt')
eq(msg.get_content_charset(), 'us-ascii')