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Okay so I'm doing some practice with JUnit Test cases and I'm trying to call a method from a different class in Java, but I can't figure it out. The classes are in different SOURCE FOLDERS so not sure if that could be a reason?

Below is a small snippet of the code, with the constructors and an example of how I'm trying to call the method.

package common;

public class MathTest {

    @Test
    public void test1(){

            if (mMultiply(5, 6)== 30){
                System.out.println("mMultiply Test has passesd");
            } else {
                System.out.println("mMultiply Test has failed");
                fail("Multiply failed for inputted parameters. ");

And now here's the the other class with the method I'm trying to call package common;

public class math {

    public static int mMultiply(int x, int y){
    return x*y;

}
2
  • what is the class name that the mMultiply method is in? Assuming its 'Math' than you need to call 'Math.mMultiply' Jun 10, 2013 at 14:33
  • Since the classes are in different folders, pay attention to the package declarations - it should match the folder structure.
    – David
    Jun 10, 2013 at 14:40

5 Answers 5

5

Since it's a static method, just import the class in your JUnit file test. Then use the Assert class of JUnit to test your function. In this case, use assertEquals. So I would rewrite the test as :

@Test
public void test1(){
    assertEquals(math.mMultiply(5, 6),30);
}
1
  • Thank you, I'm new at Java and (programming in general) and just had a huge project thrown at me! I'm learning fast though and I appreciate the help. Jun 10, 2013 at 15:11
2

You need to tell your method which class the static method is in i.e.:

if (math.mMultiply(5, 6)== 30){
        System.out.println("mMultiply Test has passesd");
    }

Incidentally, all Java classes should start with a capital letter, and there's already a core Java class called Math, so you might want to find another name.

1

try math.mMultiply It is a static method so you must specify in which class it resides

1

When you call mMultiply(5,6), do it like this: math.mMultiply(5,6).

1

Since it's a static method, you call it with its class name before it:

math.mMultiply(value1, value2).

Also, check the java code writing manuals. Class names begin with capital letter, so I would change the class of the math class to Math.

1
  • Watch out though because it conflicts with java.Math which you may want to use in the same file...
    – David
    Jun 10, 2013 at 14:38

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