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Home/ Questions/Q 871281
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T10:37:06+00:00 2026-05-15T10:37:06+00:00

I’ve started using the new(ish) JUnit Theories feature for parameterizing tests. If your Theory

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I’ve started using the new(ish) JUnit Theories feature for parameterizing tests. If your Theory is set up to take, for example, an Integer argument, the Theories test runner picks up any Integers marked with @DataPoint:

@DataPoint
public static Integer number = 0;

as well as any Integers in arrays:

@DataPoints
public static Integer[] numbers = {1, 2, 3};

or even methods that return arrays like:

@DataPoints 
public static Integer[] moreNumbers() { return new Integer[] {4, 5, 6}; };

but not in Lists. The following does not work:

@DataPoints 
public static List<Integer> numberList = Arrays.asList(7, 8, 9);

Edit: It looks like other collections are not supported either, as this does not work.

@DataPoints 
public static Collection<Integer> numberList = new HashSet<Integer>() {{
  add(7);
  add(8);
  add(9);
}};

Am I doing something wrong, or do Lists, Sets, etc. really not work? Was it a conscious design choice not to allow the use of Collections as data points, or is that just a feature that hasn’t been implemented yet? Are there plans to implement it in a future version of JUnit?

(I’m currently using version 4.8.1 whereas the newest version is 4.8.2 but it looks like this is not something that was added in 4.8.2)

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T10:37:06+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 10:37 am

    I’ve looked at the issue, and it seems there is now a pending commit for it. The reason that it wasn’t in there seems to be simply that nobody asked for it and it’s quite complex to do (as you’ve proven in your patch)

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