4

I need to pass more than 10 parameters to a TestNG Dataprovider, and the code look some what like this ...

@Test (dataProvider = "Dataprovider1")
public void testScenario1(String data1, String data2,
                          String data3, String data4,
                          String data5 //...
            ) throws Exception {
    System.out.println(data1+"---------------- "+data2+" ---------------   "+data3+" .. so on");
}

Can anyone tell me what approach we should follow in case we need to pass more than 10 parameters using @DataProvider? Is there any other way to declare the parameters for the test method?

3
  • If your method takes 10 parameters, you need to declare it with 10 parameters. Apr 30, 2013 at 16:35
  • @CedricBeust if we declare more than 10 parameters in the test method then code was looking some what odd, i wanted to know is there any way to declare these number of parameters dynamically in the parameter list section of the test method. May 2, 2013 at 4:31
  • Pass them inside an object then. Either way, it's a Java question, not a TestNG one. May 2, 2013 at 18:19

4 Answers 4

6

If you have same type of parameters then you can pass as a array in method parameter.

@Test (dataProvider = "Dataprovider1")
public void testScenario1(String args [])
            ) throws Exception {
    System.out.println(args[0]+"---------------- "+args[1]+" ---------------   "+args[3]+" .. so on");
}

Also if you have different type of parameter field then you can beak it with help of a helper class and then pass the reference of this class in parameter. e.g:

class Helper {
  String data1;
  String data2;
  String data3;
  Long data4;
  int data5;
  flot data6;
 -----so on------
 ----getter setter and constructor----
}

your test class

class Test {
@DataProvider(name="Dataprovider1")
public static Object[][] testData() {
    return new Object[][] {
            { new Helper("hey", "you", "guys" ..... another constructor parameters..) } }
    };

}

@Test (dataProvider = "Dataprovider1")
public void testScenario1(Helper helper) throws Exception {
    System.out.println(helper.data1+"---------------- "+helper.data2+" ---------------   "+helper.data3+" .. so on");
}
}
2

You can set the dataprovider to be an array of Object and use ArrayList> to have your parameters in key value pairs.

@DataProvider
public Object[][] getTestData()
{
    List<HashMap<String, String>> arrayMapList = new ArrayList<HashMap<String, String>>();
    HashMap<String, String> hashMapItems = new HashMap<String, String>();

    //use a loop to fill in all the parameter name and value pairs
    hashMapItems.put("parameterName1", "parameterValue");
    hashMapItems.put("parameterName2", "parameterValue");
    //--------------More put statements here------
    //finally add hash map to the list
    arrayMapList.add(hashMapItems);

    //Iterate the array list and store each HashMap object in an object array. First dimension is the iterator value.
    Object [][] hashMapObj = new Object [arrayMapList.size()][1];

    for(int i=0; i<arrayMapList.size() ; i++) {
        hashMapObj[i][0] = arrayMapList(i);
    }

    return hashMapObj;
}

for each hashmap value in the array list, the test method will be run with its own set of parameters

@Test (dataProvider = "getTestData", enabled = true)
public void testDataRead(HashMap<String,String> hashMapValue)
{
    System.out.println(hashMapValue.get(parameterNameKey));  //parameter 1
    System.out.println(hashMapValue.get(parameterNameKey));  //parameter 2
}
5
  • @mkl what is searchStrings.get(i) ? May 18, 2018 at 1:20
  • @BenjaminMcFerren "what is searchStrings.get(i)" - I have no idea. The answer is by NethajiPrabhu, I merely improved the formatting a bit.
    – mkl
    May 18, 2018 at 8:02
  • @BenjaminMcFerren Considering the whole answer though... I assume that code has been copied&pasted together from something bigger, probably searchStrings should have been arrayMapList, at least this would match the signature of the actual test method.
    – mkl
    May 18, 2018 at 8:17
  • @BenjaminMcFerren mkl is correct, my bad it should have been arrayMapList. Sep 9, 2019 at 3:31
  • The line hashMapObj[i][0] = arrayMapList(i); should be hashMapObj[i][0] = arrayMapList.get(i); Jul 19, 2022 at 6:17
0

DataProvider ends up with kind of an annoying syntax when you do this. Here is an example:

@DataProvider(name="objectTestData")
public static Object[][] objectTestData() {
    return new Object[][] {
            { new TestData("hey", "you", "guys") },
            { new TestData("Sloth", "Baby", "Ruth") },
            { new TestData("foo", "bar", "baz") }
    };
}

@Test(dataProvider="objectTestData")
public void testScenario1(TestData data) {
    System.out.println(data.get(0) + "..." + data.get(1) + "..." + data.get(2));
}

static class TestData {
    public String[] items;

    public TestData(String... items) {
        this.items = items; // should probably make a defensive copy
    }

    public String get(int x) {
        return items[x];
    }
}

Alternatively, you can change the TestData constructor to put things into separate named methods. (For example if you were testing address data, there could be getName, getAddress, getCity.)

0

Use Map in @DataProvider to insert many parameters with the value, and return the object that contains the map, like below:

@DataProvider
public static Object[][]Dataprovider1(){
    Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<String, String>();
    map.put("data1", "value1");
    map.put("data2", "value2");
    ....
    map.put("data10", "value10");
    return new Object[][] {
        {map}
    };
}

In @test you can get the data by adding Map also as a sub parameter:

@Test(dataProvider = "Dataprovider1")
public void testScenario1(Map<String, String> data) {
    System.out.println(data.get("data1"));
    System.out.println(data.get("data2"));
    ....
}

It will produce:

value1
value2
....

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.