Make checkIsMyInvitation use Django to parse the URL
Using django is more reliable and makes the code easier to read as
there is no knowledge of the url layout required.
Patch by: Sverre Rabbelier
BASIC_TESTS = """
>>> from django.contrib.auth.models import User, AnonymousUser
>>> u = User.objects.create_user('testuser', 'test@example.com', 'testpw')
>>> u.has_usable_password()
True
>>> u.check_password('bad')
False
>>> u.check_password('testpw')
True
>>> u.set_unusable_password()
>>> u.save()
>>> u.check_password('testpw')
False
>>> u.has_usable_password()
False
>>> u2 = User.objects.create_user('testuser2', 'test2@example.com')
>>> u2.has_usable_password()
False
>>> u.is_authenticated()
True
>>> u.is_staff
False
>>> u.is_active
True
>>> a = AnonymousUser()
>>> a.is_authenticated()
False
>>> a.is_staff
False
>>> a.is_active
False
>>> a.groups.all()
[]
>>> a.user_permissions.all()
[]
#
# Tests for createsuperuser management command.
# It's nearly impossible to test the interactive mode -- a command test helper
# would be needed (and *awesome*) -- so just test the non-interactive mode.
# This covers most of the important validation, but not all.
#
>>> from django.core.management import call_command
>>> call_command("createsuperuser", noinput=True, username="joe", email="joe@somewhere.org")
Superuser created successfully.
>>> u = User.objects.get(username="joe")
>>> u.email
u'joe@somewhere.org'
>>> u.password
u'!'
"""