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	the output required more than one line. "Small" dicts got displayed in seemingly random order (the hash-induced order produced by dict.__repr__). None of this was documented. Now pprint functions always sort dicts by key, and the docs promise it. This was proposed and agreed to during the PyCon 2006 core sprint -- I just didn't have time for it before now.
		
			
				
	
	
		
			217 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			217 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
import pprint
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import test.test_support
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import unittest
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try:
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    uni = unicode
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except NameError:
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    def uni(x):
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        return x
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# list, tuple and dict subclasses that do or don't overwrite __repr__
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class list2(list):
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    pass
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class list3(list):
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    def __repr__(self):
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        return list.__repr__(self)
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class tuple2(tuple):
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    pass
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class tuple3(tuple):
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    def __repr__(self):
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        return tuple.__repr__(self)
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class dict2(dict):
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    pass
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class dict3(dict):
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    def __repr__(self):
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        return dict.__repr__(self)
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class QueryTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
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    def setUp(self):
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        self.a = range(100)
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        self.b = range(200)
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        self.a[-12] = self.b
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    def test_basic(self):
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        # Verify .isrecursive() and .isreadable() w/o recursion
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        verify = self.assert_
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        pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter()
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        for safe in (2, 2.0, 2j, "abc", [3], (2,2), {3: 3}, uni("yaddayadda"),
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                     self.a, self.b):
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            # module-level convenience functions
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            verify(not pprint.isrecursive(safe),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (safe,))
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            verify(pprint.isreadable(safe),
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                   "expected isreadable for %r" % (safe,))
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            # PrettyPrinter methods
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            verify(not pp.isrecursive(safe),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (safe,))
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            verify(pp.isreadable(safe),
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                   "expected isreadable for %r" % (safe,))
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    def test_knotted(self):
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        # Verify .isrecursive() and .isreadable() w/ recursion
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        # Tie a knot.
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        self.b[67] = self.a
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        # Messy dict.
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        self.d = {}
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        self.d[0] = self.d[1] = self.d[2] = self.d
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        verify = self.assert_
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        pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter()
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        for icky in self.a, self.b, self.d, (self.d, self.d):
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            verify(pprint.isrecursive(icky), "expected isrecursive")
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            verify(not pprint.isreadable(icky),  "expected not isreadable")
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            verify(pp.isrecursive(icky), "expected isrecursive")
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            verify(not pp.isreadable(icky),  "expected not isreadable")
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        # Break the cycles.
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        self.d.clear()
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        del self.a[:]
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        del self.b[:]
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        for safe in self.a, self.b, self.d, (self.d, self.d):
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            # module-level convenience functions
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            verify(not pprint.isrecursive(safe),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (safe,))
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            verify(pprint.isreadable(safe),
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                   "expected isreadable for %r" % (safe,))
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            # PrettyPrinter methods
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            verify(not pp.isrecursive(safe),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (safe,))
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            verify(pp.isreadable(safe),
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                   "expected isreadable for %r" % (safe,))
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    def test_unreadable(self):
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        # Not recursive but not readable anyway
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        verify = self.assert_
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        pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter()
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        for unreadable in type(3), pprint, pprint.isrecursive:
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            # module-level convenience functions
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            verify(not pprint.isrecursive(unreadable),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (unreadable,))
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            verify(not pprint.isreadable(unreadable),
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                   "expected not isreadable for %r" % (unreadable,))
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            # PrettyPrinter methods
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            verify(not pp.isrecursive(unreadable),
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                   "expected not isrecursive for %r" % (unreadable,))
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            verify(not pp.isreadable(unreadable),
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                   "expected not isreadable for %r" % (unreadable,))
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    def test_same_as_repr(self):
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        # Simple objects, small containers and classes that overwrite __repr__
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        # For those the result should be the same as repr().
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        # Ahem.  The docs don't say anything about that -- this appears to
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        # be testing an implementation quirk.  Starting in Python 2.5, it's
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        # not true for dicts:  pprint always sorts dicts by key now; before,
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        # it sorted a dict display if and only if the display required
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        # multiple lines.  For that reason, dicts with more than one element
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        # aren't tested here.
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        verify = self.assert_
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        for simple in (0, 0L, 0+0j, 0.0, "", uni(""),
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                       (), tuple2(), tuple3(),
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                       [], list2(), list3(),
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                       {}, dict2(), dict3(),
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                       verify, pprint,
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                       -6, -6L, -6-6j, -1.5, "x", uni("x"), (3,), [3], {3: 6},
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                       (1,2), [3,4], {5: 6, 7: 8},
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                       tuple2((1,2)), tuple3((1,2)), tuple3(range(100)),
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                       [3,4], list2([3,4]), list3([3,4]), list3(range(100)),
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                       {5: 6, 7: 8}, dict2({5: 6}), dict3({5: 6}),
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                       range(10, -11, -1)
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                      ):
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            native = repr(simple)
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            for function in "pformat", "saferepr":
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                f = getattr(pprint, function)
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                got = f(simple)
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                verify(native == got, "expected %s got %s from pprint.%s" %
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                                      (native, got, function))
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    def test_basic_line_wrap(self):
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        # verify basic line-wrapping operation
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        o = {'RPM_cal': 0,
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             'RPM_cal2': 48059,
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             'Speed_cal': 0,
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             'controldesk_runtime_us': 0,
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             'main_code_runtime_us': 0,
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             'read_io_runtime_us': 0,
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             'write_io_runtime_us': 43690}
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        exp = """\
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{'RPM_cal': 0,
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 'RPM_cal2': 48059,
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 'Speed_cal': 0,
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 'controldesk_runtime_us': 0,
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 'main_code_runtime_us': 0,
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 'read_io_runtime_us': 0,
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 'write_io_runtime_us': 43690}"""
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        for type in [dict, dict2]:
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            self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat(type(o)), exp)
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        o = range(100)
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        exp = '[%s]' % ',\n '.join(map(str, o))
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        for type in [list, list2]:
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            self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat(type(o)), exp)
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        o = tuple(range(100))
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        exp = '(%s)' % ',\n '.join(map(str, o))
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        for type in [tuple, tuple2]:
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            self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat(type(o)), exp)
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        # indent parameter
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        o = range(100)
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        exp = '[   %s]' % ',\n    '.join(map(str, o))
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        for type in [list, list2]:
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            self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat(type(o), indent=4), exp)
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    def test_sorted_dict(self):
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        # Starting in Python 2.5, pprint sorts dict displays by key regardless
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        # of how small the dictionary may be.
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        # Before the change, on 32-bit Windows pformat() gave order
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        # 'a', 'c', 'b' here, so this test failed.
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        d = {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 1}
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        self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat(d), "{'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 1}")
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        self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat([d, d]),
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            "[{'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1, 'b': 1, 'c': 1}]")
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        # The next one is kind of goofy.  The sorted order depends on the
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        # alphabetic order of type names:  "int" < "str" < "tuple".  Before
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        # Python 2.5, this was in the test_same_as_repr() test.  It's worth
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        # keeping around for now because it's one of few tests of pprint
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        # against a crazy mix of types.
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        self.assertEqual(pprint.pformat({"xy\tab\n": (3,), 5: [[]], (): {}}),
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            r"{5: [[]], 'xy\tab\n': (3,), (): {}}")
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    def test_subclassing(self):
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        o = {'names with spaces': 'should be presented using repr()',
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             'others.should.not.be': 'like.this'}
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        exp = """\
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{'names with spaces': 'should be presented using repr()',
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 others.should.not.be: like.this}"""
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        self.assertEqual(DottedPrettyPrinter().pformat(o), exp)
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class DottedPrettyPrinter(pprint.PrettyPrinter):
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    def format(self, object, context, maxlevels, level):
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        if isinstance(object, str):
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            if ' ' in object:
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                return repr(object), 1, 0
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            else:
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                return object, 0, 0
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        else:
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            return pprint.PrettyPrinter.format(
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                self, object, context, maxlevels, level)
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def test_main():
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    test.test_support.run_unittest(QueryTestCase)
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if __name__ == "__main__":
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    test_main()
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