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  • Book Overview & Buying Testing with JUnit
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Testing with JUnit

Testing with JUnit

By : Leonard Przybylski, Appel
4.3 (7)
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Testing with JUnit

Testing with JUnit

4.3 (7)
By: Leonard Przybylski, Appel

Overview of this book

JUnit has matured to become the most important tool when it comes to automated developer tests in Java. Supported by all IDEs and build systems, it empowers programmers to deliver software features reliably and efficiently. However, writing good unit tests is a skill that needs to be learned; otherwise it's all too easy to end up in gridlocked development due to messed up production and testing code. Acquiring the best practices for unit testing will help you to prevent such problems and lead your projects to success with respect to quality and costs. This book explains JUnit concepts and best practices applied to the test first approach, a foundation for high quality Java components delivered in time and budget. From the beginning you'll be guided continuously through a practically relevant example and pick up background knowledge and development techniques step by step. Starting with the basics of tests organization you'll soon comprehend the necessity of well structured tests and delve into the relationship of requirement decomposition and the many-faceted world of test double usage. In conjunction with third-party tools you'll be trained in writing your tests efficiently, adapt your test case environment to particular demands and increase the expressiveness of your verification statements. Finally, you'll experience continuous integration as the perfect complement to support short feedback cycles and quality related reports for your whole team. The tutorial gives a profound entry point in the essentials of unit testing with JUnit and prepares you for test-related daily work challenges.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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10
Index

Testing patterns

Testing exceptional flow is a bit trickier than verifying the outcome of normal execution paths. The following section will explain why and introduce the different techniques available to get this job done.

Using the fail statement

 

"Always expect the unexpected"

 
 --Adage based on Heraclitus

Testing corner cases often results in the necessity to verify that a functionality throws a particular exception. Think, for example, of a java.util.List implementation. It quits the retrieval attempt of a list's element by means of a non-existing index number with java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException.

Working with exceptional flow is somewhat special as without any precautions, the exercise phase would terminate immediately. But this is not what we want since it eventuates in a test failure. Indeed, the exception itself is the expected outcome of the behavior we want to check.

From this, it follows that we have to capture the exception before we can verify...

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