TestNG
JUnit and TestNG are two major Java testing frameworks. You already wrote tests with JUnit in the previous chapter, Chapter 3, Red-Green-Refactor – From Failure Through Success until Perfection, and, hopefully, got a good understanding of how it works. How about TestNG? It was born out of a desire to make JUnit better. Indeed, it contains some functionalities that JUnit doesn't have.
The following subsections summarize some of the differences between the two of them. We'll try not only to provide an explanation of the differences, but also their evaluation in the context of unit testing with TDD.
The @Test annotation
Both JUnit and TestNG use the @Test
annotation to specify which method is considered to be a test. Unlike JUnit, which requires every method to be annotated with @Test
, TestNG allows us to use this annotation on a class level, as well. When used in this way, all public methods are considered tests unless specified otherwise:
@Test public class DirectionSpec { public void...