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Learning Android Application Testing

You're reading from   Learning Android Application Testing Improve your Android applications through intensive testing and debugging

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784395339
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Paul Blundell Paul Blundell
Author Profile Icon Paul Blundell
Paul Blundell
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Testing 2. Understanding Testing with the Android SDK FREE CHAPTER 3. Baking with Testing Recipes 4. Managing Your Android Testing Environment 5. Discovering Continuous Integration 6. Practicing Test-driven Development 7. Behavior-driven Development 8. Testing and Profiling Performance 9. Alternative Testing Tactics Index

Assertions in depth


Assertions are methods that check for a condition that can be evaluated. If the condition is not met, the assertion method will throw an exception, thereby aborting the execution of the test.

The JUnit API includes the class Assert. This is the base class of all the TestCase classes that hold several assertion methods useful for writing tests. These inherited methods test for a variety of conditions and are overloaded to support different parameter types. They can be grouped together in the following different sets, depending on the condition checked, for example:

  • assertEquals

  • assertTrue

  • assertFalse

  • assertNull

  • assertNotNull

  • assertSame

  • assertNotSame

  • fail

The condition tested is pretty obvious and is easily identifiable by the method name. Perhaps the ones that deserve some attention are assertEquals() and assertSame(). The former, when used on objects, asserts that both objects passed as parameters are equally calling the objects' equals() method. The latter asserts that both objects...

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Learning Android Application Testing
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Learning Android Application Testing
Published in: Mar 2015
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781784395339
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