Hypothesis is an advanced testing library for Python. It lets you write tests which are parametrized by a source of examples, and then generates simple and comprehensible examples that make your tests fail. This lets you find more bugs in your code with less work.
e.g.
@given(st.lists(st.floats(allow_nan=False, allow_infinity=False), min_size=1))
def test_mean(xs):
assert min(xs) <= mean(xs) <= max(xs)
Falsifying example: test_mean( xs=[1.7976321109618856e+308, 6.102390043022755e+303] )
Hypothesis is extremely practical and advances the state of the art of unit testing by some way. It's easy to use, stable, and powerful. If you're not using Hypothesis to test your project then you're missing out.
If you just want to get started:
pip install hypothesis
The main Hypothesis site is at hypothesis.works, and contains a lot of good introductory and explanatory material.
Extensive documentation and examples of usage are available at readthedocs.
If you want to talk to people about using Hypothesis, we have both an IRC channel and a mailing list.
If you want to receive occasional updates about Hypothesis, including useful tips and tricks, there's a TinyLetter mailing list to sign up for them.
If you want to contribute to Hypothesis, instructions are here.
If you want to hear from people who are already using Hypothesis, some of them have written about it.
If you want to create a downstream package of Hypothesis, please read these guidelines for packagers.