This is just a set of tools to help writing correction bots in Python for Python.
It is used for hackinscience, but could be used elsewhere.
Running student code is probably really unsafe, unless you trust your students not to drop you a backdoor.
This projet does not help with security in any ways, maybe take a
look at firejail if you have
trust issues (Yes you can use correction-helper
inside firejail
).
To install it, run: pip install correction-helper
.
In your checking code, you can use it like this:
This decorator is aimed to catch most problems that could happen in student code, use it simply as:
with student_code():
their_function()
Find a more complete example in the examples/
directory.
Printed right before the exception, if any.
It's allowed to give a list of strings, in which case they'll be
separated by "\n\n"
, useful to render markdown paragraphs.
Message to display before the student prints (in case print_allowed
is False
or None
).
It's allowed to give a list of strings, in which case they'll be
separated by "\n\n"
, useful to render markdown paragraphs.
Message to display in case the code runs slower than the given timeout
(defaults to 1s).
It's allowed to give a list of strings, in which case they'll be
separated by "\n\n"
, useful to render markdown paragraphs.
A prefix for print_prefix
, exception_prefix
, and
too_slow_message=
, usefull to deduplicate strings, like:
with student_code(
prefix="While calling blahblah('bar')",
print_prefix="it printed:",
exception_prefix="it raised:",
too_slow_message="it took more than 1s, had to kill it.",
):
blahblah('bar')
To use, or not friendly-traceback instead of bare Python exceptions.
To allow or deny the student to print to stdout and stderr.
True
: Prints are allowed (and displayed).None
: Prints are allowed (but not displayed).False
: Prints are disallowed (and displayed).
In all cases you can read what they printed using the value of the context manager:
with student_code(print_allowed=None) as run:
their_function()
assert run.err == ""
assert run.out == "42"
Write the student checking code a you would write unit test for your own code.