You can do this by writing a special activity whose only purpose is to start the activity you are testing for result and save the result for you to assert correctness on.
For example, you could create an activity named ResultReceiverActivity. Give it three methods: getResultCode, getResultData, and getReceivedRequestCode, which can be used to verify that the tested activity returned the right values. You would create a test case that extends ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2 and the generic parameter would be ResultReceiverActivity. Calling getActivity will get you the activity instance.
public class ReturnedResultTest
extends ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2<ResultReceiverActivity> {
public void testReturnedResult() {
ResultReceiverActivity a = getActivity();
assertEquals(Activity.RESULT_OK, a.getResultCode());
assertEquals("myResult", a.getResultData().getStringExtra("test"));
assertEquals(0x9999, a.getReceivedRequestCode());
}
}
ResultReceiverActivity needs to override onActivityResult, of course, and should just store the values of that methods parameter in its fields, like so:
@Override
protected void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int resultCode, Intent data) {
super.onActivityResult(requestCode, resultCode, data);
this.receivedRequestCode = requestCode;
this.resultCode = resultCode;
this.resultData = data;
}
Of course, you may want to customize the activity that ResultReceiverActivity starts, and you can easily do that by using getIntent in its onCreate method. In your test case, call setActivityIntent before calling getActivity to set which Intent is used to start the activity.