thirdparty/coverage/setup.py
author Pawel Solyga <Pawel.Solyga@gmail.com>
Sun, 01 Feb 2009 16:10:20 +0000
changeset 1152 b82caf7bb17c
parent 780 042aafcd7dce
permissions -rw-r--r--
Add Google Maps integration for Role profiles create/edit views. Now when editing/creating your Role Profile page Google Maps widget will show up at the bottom of the form as "Location" field. When you type in your Street, City, Country or State it will automatically update the map with the location based on your address. The zoom level depends on the address information you provided. So for example if you just select Country it will be different then when you select both Country and City. The longitude and latitude fields are hidden and are updated with the coordinates from the address you provided. Also if the map is not accurate enough you can adjust your location by dragging the red market, which will change your location and save new coordinates into hidden fields. This patch also includes some style fixes in soc.views.models.role module. Patch by: Mario Ferraro & Pawel Solyga Reviewed by: Pawel Solyga

# setup.py for coverage.

"""\
Coverage: code coverage testing for Python

Coverage.py is a Python module that measures code coverage during test execution.
It uses the code analysis tools and tracing hooks provided in the Python standard
library to determine which lines are executable, and which have been executed.
"""

classifiers = """\
Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Environment :: Console
Intended Audience :: Developers
License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Operating System :: OS Independent
Programming Language :: Python
Topic :: Software Development :: Quality Assurance
Topic :: Software Development :: Testing
"""

version = '2.85'

from setuptools import setup, find_packages

doclines = __doc__.split("\n")

setup(
    name = 'coverage',
    version = version,
    py_modules = ['coverage'],
    entry_points={
        'console_scripts': [
            'coverage = coverage:main',
        ]
    },
    zip_safe = True,    # __file__ appears in the source, but doesn't break zippy-ness.
    
    author = 'Ned Batchelder',
    author_email = 'ned@nedbatchelder.com',
    description = doclines[0],
    long_description = "\n".join(doclines[2:]),
    keywords = 'code coverage testing',
    license = 'BSD',
    classifiers = filter(None, classifiers.split("\n")),
    url = 'http://nedbatchelder.com/code/modules/coverage.html',
    download_url = 'http://nedbatchelder.com/code/modules/coverage-%s.tar.gz' % version,
)