I am thinking about how to write tests for my project. At the moment, tests structure is like this:
RealClass
{
method1;
method2;
...
}
and exactly same test class structure:
TestClass {
testMethod1;
testMethod2;
...
}
But, I do not like it, because I am putting too much test cases in one test method…
May be I should use structure like this:
TestClass {
testMethod1Opt1;
testMethod1Opt2;
...
testMethod2Opt1;
...}
How are you writing Unit tests?
Example of my test code: (Very simple test)
public void testIsAppUser() {
// My (Artem`s Zinnatullin) uId
final long artemZinnatullinUId = 172672179;
try {
assertTrue(usersApi.isAppUser(artemZinnatullinUId));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
// Pavel`s Durov uId
final long durovUId = 1;
try {
assertFalse(usersApi.isAppUser(durovUId));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
// By default uId == current user`s (who has authorized) uId
try {
assertTrue(usersApi.isAppUser(null));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
}
What I am thinking about:
public void testIsAppUser1() {
// My (Artem`s Zinnatullin) uId
final long artemZinnatullinUId = 172672179;
try {
assertTrue(usersApi.isAppUser(artemZinnatullinUId));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
}
public void testIsAppUser2() {
// Pavel`s Durov uId
final long durovUId = 1;
try {
assertFalse(usersApi.isAppUser(durovUId));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
}
public void testIsAppUser3() {
// By default uId == current user`s (who has authorized) uId
try {
assertTrue(usersApi.isAppUser(null));
} catch (Exception e) {
fail(e.getMessage());
}
}
Give me advice please.
Comments:
Instead of
try{} catch(){ fail() }just addthrows Exceptionto the test method. JUnit will automatically fail the test for you and preserve the stack trace. This will make bug fixing much easier.Create small test methods. That creates a name problem: How to come up with lots of good names? The solution here is to name the test after what it logically tests, not which methods it calls.
If you want to see what methods are called, use a code coverage tool like JaCoCo.
So the first test should be called
testIsArtemsZinnatullinAppUser(). As a guideline: Whenever you feel like you need a comment to explain what a test does, the test name is wrong. Use whatever you’d write in the comment to create a test name.The reason why you should have smaller tests is that JUnit stops for the first problem. So if you have 20 tests in one test case and the 3rd fails, 17 tests won’t run. But these 17 tests could contain valuable information helping to figure out what is wrong.
If they all succeed, then this is probably a specific problem. If many tests fail, the problem must be in shared code.