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By default, it preserves an inconsistent behavior of older Python versions: packs the count into a 1-tuple if only one or none options are specified (including 'update'), returns None instead of 0. Except that setting wantobjects to 0 no longer affects the result. Add a new parameter return_ints: specifying return_ints=True makes Text.count() always returning the single count as an integer instead of a 1-tuple or None. |
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|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| __init__.py | ||
| __main__.py | ||
| README | ||
| support.py | ||
| test_colorchooser.py | ||
| test_font.py | ||
| test_geometry_managers.py | ||
| test_images.py | ||
| test_loadtk.py | ||
| test_messagebox.py | ||
| test_misc.py | ||
| test_simpledialog.py | ||
| test_text.py | ||
| test_variables.py | ||
| test_widgets.py | ||
| widget_tests.py | ||
Writing new tests
=================
Precaution
----------
New tests should always use only one Tk window at once, like all the
current tests do. This means that you have to destroy the current window
before creating another one, and clean up after the test. The motivation
behind this is that some tests may depend on having its window focused
while it is running to work properly, and it may be hard to force focus
on your window across platforms (right now only test_traversal at
test_ttk.test_widgets.NotebookTest depends on this).