commit | 90f1e57e1d5b419bf7fdccfa7e9fc231df8c9d39 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Chih-Hung Hsieh <[email protected]> | Fri Jan 11 10:48:38 2019 -0800 |
committer | android-build-merger <[email protected]> | Fri Jan 11 10:48:38 2019 -0800 |
tree | d23221da274f2eb57777051c1ca045e3281313e7 | |
parent | c5e60baa72d4b5118c13cb7f7a73f7e969e85157 [diff] | |
parent | ad1f27db5caae0b782895d404d184a5b4f26c1cb [diff] |
Add default code reviewers into OWNERS am: 9455ffae9d am: 4f3e711b44 am: ad1f27db5c Change-Id: I9374a8ac12d502ad02d8ff3da8b68ebad78a22dd
Parameterised tests that don't suck
@RunWith(JUnitParamsRunner.class) public class PersonTest { @Test @Parameters({"17, false", "22, true" }) public void personIsAdult(int age, boolean valid) throws Exception { assertThat(new Person(age).isAdult(), is(valid)); } }
See more examples
JUnitParams project adds a new runner to JUnit and provides much easier and readable parametrised tests for JUnit >=4.6.
Main differences to standard JUnit Parametrised runner:
JUnitParams is available as Maven artifact:
<dependency> <groupId>pl.pragmatists</groupId> <artifactId>JUnitParams</artifactId> <version>1.0.4</version> <scope>test</scope> </dependency>
If you want to see just one simple test class with all main ways to use JUnitParams see here: https://github.com/Pragmatists/junitparams/tree/master/src/test/java/junitparams/usage
You can also have a look at Wiki:Quickstart
Note: We are currently moving the project from Google Code to Github. Some information may still be accessible only at https://code.google.com/p/junitparams/