""" If you are using assertTrue or assertFalse and the first argument is a constant (like a string), then the assert will always be true. Therefore, it should emit a warning message. """ # pylint: disable=missing-docstring,too-few-public-methods # Disabled because of a bug with pypy 3.8 see # https://github.com/pylint-dev/pylint/pull/7918#issuecomment-1352737369 # pylint: disable=multiple-statements import unittest @unittest.skip("don't run this") class Tests(unittest.TestCase): def test_something(self): ''' Simple test ''' some_var = 'It should be assertEqual' # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertTrue('I meant assertEqual not assertTrue', some_var) # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertFalse('I meant assertEqual not assertFalse', some_var) # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertTrue(True, some_var) # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertFalse(False, some_var) # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertFalse(None, some_var) # +1:[redundant-unittest-assert] self.assertTrue(0, some_var) self.assertTrue('should be' in some_var, some_var) self.assertTrue(some_var, some_var) @unittest.skip("don't run this") class RegressionWithArgs(unittest.TestCase): '''Don't fail if the bound method doesn't have arguments.''' def test(self): self.run()