import collections import operator import sys import pytest import pandas as pd import pandas._testing as tm from pandas.tests.extension import base from pandas.tests.extension.json.array import ( JSONArray, JSONDtype, make_data, ) @pytest.fixture def dtype(): return JSONDtype() @pytest.fixture def data(): """Length-100 PeriodArray for semantics test.""" data = make_data() # Why the while loop? NumPy is unable to construct an ndarray from # equal-length ndarrays. Many of our operations involve coercing the # EA to an ndarray of objects. To avoid random test failures, we ensure # that our data is coercible to an ndarray. Several tests deal with only # the first two elements, so that's what we'll check. while len(data[0]) == len(data[1]): data = make_data() return JSONArray(data) @pytest.fixture def data_missing(): """Length 2 array with [NA, Valid]""" return JSONArray([{}, {"a": 10}]) @pytest.fixture def data_for_sorting(): return JSONArray([{"b": 1}, {"c": 4}, {"a": 2, "c": 3}]) @pytest.fixture def data_missing_for_sorting(): return JSONArray([{"b": 1}, {}, {"a": 4}]) @pytest.fixture def na_value(dtype): return dtype.na_value @pytest.fixture def na_cmp(): return operator.eq @pytest.fixture def data_for_grouping(): return JSONArray( [ {"b": 1}, {"b": 1}, {}, {}, {"a": 0, "c": 2}, {"a": 0, "c": 2}, {"b": 1}, {"c": 2}, ] ) class BaseJSON: # NumPy doesn't handle an array of equal-length UserDicts. # The default assert_series_equal eventually does a # Series.values, which raises. We work around it by # converting the UserDicts to dicts. @classmethod def assert_series_equal(cls, left, right, *args, **kwargs): if left.dtype.name == "json": assert left.dtype == right.dtype left = pd.Series( JSONArray(left.values.astype(object)), index=left.index, name=left.name ) right = pd.Series( JSONArray(right.values.astype(object)), index=right.index, name=right.name, ) tm.assert_series_equal(left, right, *args, **kwargs) @classmethod def assert_frame_equal(cls, left, right, *args, **kwargs): obj_type = kwargs.get("obj", "DataFrame") tm.assert_index_equal( left.columns, right.columns, exact=kwargs.get("check_column_type", "equiv"), check_names=kwargs.get("check_names", True), check_exact=kwargs.get("check_exact", False), check_categorical=kwargs.get("check_categorical", True), obj=f"{obj_type}.columns", ) jsons = (left.dtypes == "json").index for col in jsons: cls.assert_series_equal(left[col], right[col], *args, **kwargs) left = left.drop(columns=jsons) right = right.drop(columns=jsons) tm.assert_frame_equal(left, right, *args, **kwargs) class TestDtype(BaseJSON, base.BaseDtypeTests): pass class TestInterface(BaseJSON, base.BaseInterfaceTests): def test_custom_asserts(self): # This would always trigger the KeyError from trying to put # an array of equal-length UserDicts inside an ndarray. data = JSONArray( [ collections.UserDict({"a": 1}), collections.UserDict({"b": 2}), collections.UserDict({"c": 3}), ] ) a = pd.Series(data) self.assert_series_equal(a, a) self.assert_frame_equal(a.to_frame(), a.to_frame()) b = pd.Series(data.take([0, 0, 1])) msg = r"Series are different" with pytest.raises(AssertionError, match=msg): self.assert_series_equal(a, b) with pytest.raises(AssertionError, match=msg): self.assert_frame_equal(a.to_frame(), b.to_frame()) @pytest.mark.xfail( reason="comparison method not implemented for JSONArray (GH-37867)" ) def test_contains(self, data): # GH-37867 super().test_contains(data) class TestConstructors(BaseJSON, base.BaseConstructorsTests): @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="not implemented constructor from dtype") def test_from_dtype(self, data): # construct from our dtype & string dtype super().test_from_dtype(data) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="RecursionError, GH-33900") def test_series_constructor_no_data_with_index(self, dtype, na_value): # RecursionError: maximum recursion depth exceeded in comparison rec_limit = sys.getrecursionlimit() try: # Limit to avoid stack overflow on Windows CI sys.setrecursionlimit(100) super().test_series_constructor_no_data_with_index(dtype, na_value) finally: sys.setrecursionlimit(rec_limit) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="RecursionError, GH-33900") def test_series_constructor_scalar_na_with_index(self, dtype, na_value): # RecursionError: maximum recursion depth exceeded in comparison rec_limit = sys.getrecursionlimit() try: # Limit to avoid stack overflow on Windows CI sys.setrecursionlimit(100) super().test_series_constructor_scalar_na_with_index(dtype, na_value) finally: sys.setrecursionlimit(rec_limit) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="collection as scalar, GH-33901") def test_series_constructor_scalar_with_index(self, data, dtype): # TypeError: All values must be of type rec_limit = sys.getrecursionlimit() try: # Limit to avoid stack overflow on Windows CI sys.setrecursionlimit(100) super().test_series_constructor_scalar_with_index(data, dtype) finally: sys.setrecursionlimit(rec_limit) class TestReshaping(BaseJSON, base.BaseReshapingTests): @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Different definitions of NA") def test_stack(self): """ The test does .astype(object).stack(). If we happen to have any missing values in `data`, then we'll end up with different rows since we consider `{}` NA, but `.astype(object)` doesn't. """ super().test_stack() @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="dict for NA") def test_unstack(self, data, index): # The base test has NaN for the expected NA value. # this matches otherwise return super().test_unstack(data, index) class TestGetitem(BaseJSON, base.BaseGetitemTests): pass class TestIndex(BaseJSON, base.BaseIndexTests): pass class TestMissing(BaseJSON, base.BaseMissingTests): @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Setting a dict as a scalar") def test_fillna_series(self): """We treat dictionaries as a mapping in fillna, not a scalar.""" super().test_fillna_series() @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Setting a dict as a scalar") def test_fillna_frame(self): """We treat dictionaries as a mapping in fillna, not a scalar.""" super().test_fillna_frame() unhashable = pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Unhashable") class TestReduce(base.BaseNoReduceTests): pass class TestMethods(BaseJSON, base.BaseMethodsTests): @unhashable def test_value_counts(self, all_data, dropna): super().test_value_counts(all_data, dropna) @unhashable def test_value_counts_with_normalize(self, data): super().test_value_counts_with_normalize(data) @unhashable def test_sort_values_frame(self): # TODO (EA.factorize): see if _values_for_factorize allows this. super().test_sort_values_frame() @pytest.mark.parametrize("ascending", [True, False]) def test_sort_values(self, data_for_sorting, ascending, sort_by_key): super().test_sort_values(data_for_sorting, ascending, sort_by_key) @pytest.mark.parametrize("ascending", [True, False]) def test_sort_values_missing( self, data_missing_for_sorting, ascending, sort_by_key ): super().test_sort_values_missing( data_missing_for_sorting, ascending, sort_by_key ) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="combine for JSONArray not supported") def test_combine_le(self, data_repeated): super().test_combine_le(data_repeated) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="combine for JSONArray not supported") def test_combine_add(self, data_repeated): super().test_combine_add(data_repeated) @pytest.mark.xfail( reason="combine for JSONArray not supported - " "may pass depending on random data", strict=False, raises=AssertionError, ) def test_combine_first(self, data): super().test_combine_first(data) @unhashable def test_hash_pandas_object_works(self, data, kind): super().test_hash_pandas_object_works(data, kind) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="broadcasting error") def test_where_series(self, data, na_value): # Fails with # *** ValueError: operands could not be broadcast together # with shapes (4,) (4,) (0,) super().test_where_series(data, na_value) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Can't compare dicts.") def test_searchsorted(self, data_for_sorting): super().test_searchsorted(data_for_sorting) @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="Can't compare dicts.") def test_equals(self, data, na_value, as_series): super().test_equals(data, na_value, as_series) @pytest.mark.skip("fill-value is interpreted as a dict of values") def test_fillna_copy_frame(self, data_missing): super().test_fillna_copy_frame(data_missing) class TestCasting(BaseJSON, base.BaseCastingTests): @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="failing on np.array(self, dtype=str)") def test_astype_str(self): """This currently fails in NumPy on np.array(self, dtype=str) with *** ValueError: setting an array element with a sequence """ super().test_astype_str() # We intentionally don't run base.BaseSetitemTests because pandas' # internals has trouble setting sequences of values into scalar positions. class TestGroupby(BaseJSON, base.BaseGroupbyTests): @unhashable def test_groupby_extension_transform(self): """ This currently fails in Series.name.setter, since the name must be hashable, but the value is a dictionary. I think this is what we want, i.e. `.name` should be the original values, and not the values for factorization. """ super().test_groupby_extension_transform() @unhashable def test_groupby_extension_apply(self): """ This fails in Index._do_unique_check with > hash(val) E TypeError: unhashable type: 'UserDict' with I suspect that once we support Index[ExtensionArray], we'll be able to dispatch unique. """ super().test_groupby_extension_apply() @unhashable def test_groupby_extension_agg(self): """ This fails when we get to tm.assert_series_equal when left.index contains dictionaries, which are not hashable. """ super().test_groupby_extension_agg() @unhashable def test_groupby_extension_no_sort(self): """ This fails when we get to tm.assert_series_equal when left.index contains dictionaries, which are not hashable. """ super().test_groupby_extension_no_sort() @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="GH#39098: Converts agg result to object") def test_groupby_agg_extension(self, data_for_grouping): super().test_groupby_agg_extension(data_for_grouping) class TestArithmeticOps(BaseJSON, base.BaseArithmeticOpsTests): def test_arith_frame_with_scalar(self, data, all_arithmetic_operators, request): if len(data[0]) != 1: mark = pytest.mark.xfail(reason="raises in coercing to Series") request.node.add_marker(mark) super().test_arith_frame_with_scalar(data, all_arithmetic_operators) def test_add_series_with_extension_array(self, data): ser = pd.Series(data) with pytest.raises(TypeError, match="unsupported"): ser + data @pytest.mark.xfail(reason="not implemented") def test_divmod_series_array(self): # GH 23287 # skipping because it is not implemented super().test_divmod_series_array() def _check_divmod_op(self, s, op, other, exc=NotImplementedError): return super()._check_divmod_op(s, op, other, exc=TypeError) class TestComparisonOps(BaseJSON, base.BaseComparisonOpsTests): pass class TestPrinting(BaseJSON, base.BasePrintingTests): pass