I created a custom Stack data structure which is backed by an array. The push() method throws a custom exception when the stack is full and you still try to push() data into the stack. You could handle it like this :
public class TestStackDataStructure {
//All test methods use this variable.
public Stack<String> stack;//This Stack class is NOT from Java.
@BeforeMethod
public void beforeMethod(){
//Don't want to repeat this code inside each test, especially if we have several lines for setup.
stack = new Stack<>(5);
}
@Test
public void pushItemIntoAFullStack(){
//I know this code won't throw exceptions, but what if we have some code that does ?
IntStream.rangeClosed(1,5).mapToObj(i -> i + "").forEach(stack::push);
try{
stack.push("6");
Assert.fail("Exception expected.");
}catch (StackIsFullException ex) {
// do nothing;
}
}
//Other tests here.
}
Alternately, you could change your api as suggested here :
@Test
public void pushItemIntoAFullStack(){
IntStream.rangeClosed(1,5).mapToObj(i -> i + "").forEach(stack::push);
Assert.assertFalse( stack.push("6"), "Expected push to fail." );
}
I updated the push method to return true or false if the operation passed or failed, instead of returning void. The Java Stack.push(item) returns the element you tried to insert instead of void. I don't know why. But, it also inherits a similar method addElement(item) from Vector which returns void.
One minor downside I see to making push(item) return a boolean or void is that you are stuck with those return types. If you return Stack instead then you can write code conveniently like this stack.push(1).push(2).push(3).pop()
. But, I don't know how often one would have to write code like that.
Similarly, my pop() method used to return a generic type "T" and used to throw an exception if the stack was empty. I updated it to return Optional<T>
instead.
@Test
public void popEmptyStack(){
Assert.assertTrue(stack.pop().isEmpty());
}
I guess I am now free of the clunky try-catch blocks and TestNg expectedExceptions. Hopefully, my design is good now.