In my previous projects I've done most of the work through Activities and used ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2 as per the document:
http://developer.android.com/tools/testing/activity_testing.html
I have an idea how to work with Activity Test cases; but when it comes to Fragment ,I don't have much idea nor found much documents related to that.
So how to write test cases when I have several fragments with one or two actvities?
Any example code or sample would be more helpful.
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Perhaps you should add another tag, like "android-testing" to get more attention. Besides that, Activity is like a Fragment except it has onCreateView(). And Fragments could be released from memory even while the app is active.– The Original AndroidJun 18, 2015 at 8:37
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@TheOriginalAndroid added:-)– AnswerDroidJun 18, 2015 at 8:46
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You can take a look at MVP approach, it will make such testing easier for you.– Dmitry ZaytsevJun 22, 2015 at 8:31
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@DmitryZaitsev can you explain a bit more?Or perhaps an example or link– AnswerDroidJun 22, 2015 at 9:00
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antonioleiva.com/mvp-android– Dmitry ZaytsevJun 22, 2015 at 10:06
5 Answers
Here's a rough guide using ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2
:
Step 1. Create a blank Activity to hold your fragment(s)
private static class FragmentUtilActivity extends Activity {
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
LinearLayout view = new LinearLayout(this);
view.setId(1);
setContentView(view);
}
}
Step 2: Inside your test, instantiate your fragment and add it to the blank activity
public class MyFragmentTest extends ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2<FragmentUtilActivity> {
private MyFragment fragment;
@Before
public void setup() {
fragment = new MyFragment();
getActivity().getFragmentManager().beginTransaction().add(1, fragment, null).commit();
}
}
Step 3 Test your instantiated fragment
@Test
public void aTest() {
fragment.getView().findViewById(...);
}
If you're using robolectric, this is pretty straightforward using the FragmentUtilTest class:
@Test
public void aTest() {
// instantiate your fragment
MyFragment fragment = new MyFragment();
// Add it to a blank activity
FragmentTestUtil.startVisibleFragment(fragment);
// ... call getView().findViewById() on your fragment
}
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In android studio ; it automatically creates a test package.However it is not allowing me to add an activity inside that package. Any idea? Jun 22, 2015 at 12:04
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2To test support-v4 Fragments, use
SupportFragmentTestUtil.startVisibleFragment()
.– ThomasWJul 7, 2016 at 6:19 -
how to handle this when fragment depends on its activity and the activity itself run fragment from pager? Jul 23, 2016 at 7:54
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@SiavashA: this depends on what you are trying to test. If you want to test just the fragment, you should encapsulate all functionality within the fragment and mock/stub any external dependencies. Alternatively you can also directly write tests for your Activity if it is too closely-coupled with the Fragment. Feel free to write a new question if you have more specific questions.– NachiJul 25, 2016 at 13:28
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@AnswerDroid Activity does not to be added inside the
test
package , you have to add injava
package only ,As activity classname doesn't have Test keyword in it .– AdiOct 2, 2018 at 12:54
Here is my working solution:
Create an instrumentation unit test class for this in androidTest directory, i.e.:
public class FragmentTest extends ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2<MainActivity> { private MainActivity testingActivity; private TestFragment testFragment; //... }
call this constructor inside this new class:
public FragmentTest() { super(MainActivity.class); }
override the setUp() method (be sure to have R.id.fragmentContainer in your Activity class) where you will call at the end waitForIdleSync():
@Override protected void setUp() throws Exception { super.setUp(); // Starts the activity under test using // the default Intent with: // action = {@link Intent#ACTION_MAIN} // flags = {@link Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK} // All other fields are null or empty. testingActivity = getActivity(); testFragment = new TestFragment(); testingActivity.getFragmentManager().beginTransaction().add(R.id.fragmentContainer,testFragment,null).commit(); /** * Synchronously wait for the application to be idle. Can not be called * from the main application thread -- use {@link #start} to execute * instrumentation in its own thread. * * Without waitForIdleSync(); our test would have nulls in fragment references. */ getInstrumentation().waitForIdleSync(); }
Write a test method, for example somethng like:
public void testGameFragmentsTextViews() { String empty = ""; TextView textView = (TextView)testFragment.getView().findViewById(R.id.myTextView); assertTrue("Empty stuff",(textView.getText().equals(empty))); }
Run the test.
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How to perform this by using instrumentation test for fragment onView(withId(R.id.txt_first_num_add)) .perform(typeText("6"));– LassieOct 27, 2017 at 13:20
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getInstrumentation().waitForIdleSync(); helped me. In my case,i was passing argument and everything.. but it was not initializing viewmodel.. but this case helped me .– ReshmaNov 2, 2022 at 13:30
AndroidX
provides a library, FragmentScenario
, to create fragments and change their state.
app/build.gradle
dependencies {
def fragment_version = "1.0.0"
// ...
debugImplementation 'androidx.fragment:fragment-testing:$fragment_version'
}
example
@RunWith(AndroidJUnit4::class)
class MyTestSuite {
@Test fun testEventFragment() {
// The "fragmentArgs" and "factory" arguments are optional.
val fragmentArgs = Bundle().apply {
putInt("selectedListItem", 0)
}
val factory = MyFragmentFactory()
val scenario = launchFragmentInContainer<MyFragment>(
fragmentArgs, factory)
onView(withId(R.id.text)).check(matches(withText("Hello World!")))
}
}
More at official docs.
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Have you tried this @Levon Petrosyan. I have accepted this as answer though. Sep 23, 2019 at 12:38
Use your main activity as the test activity that you send to ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2. Then you can work with the fragments through the fragment manager of your main activity that launches the fragments. This is even better than having a test activity because it uses the logic that you write in your main activity to test scenarios, which gives a fuller and more complete test.
Example:
public class YourFragmentTest extends ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2<MainActivity> {
public YourFragmentTest(){
super(MainActivity.class);
}
}
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getActivity().getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction(). replace(R.id.fragment,new LoginFragment(),"LOGIN") .commit(); I am doing this . .Then I wish to test LoginFragment.How to acheive? Jun 26, 2015 at 6:26
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Can you provide more details? What are you trying to test? This is where you should be doing your basic unit testing - look here: http://developer.android.com/tools/testing/what_to_test.html for more ideas of what to test.– melkothJun 26, 2015 at 14:05
Right now ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2 is deprecated. Now you can use rules in order to use activities within your tests: http://wiebe-elsinga.com/blog/whats-new-in-android-testing/
In order for those to work you'll have to add the dependencies to you build.gradle:
testCompile 'com.android.support.test:rules:0.5'
testCompile 'com.android.support.test:runner:0.5'
(See Why cannot I import AndroidJUnit4 and ActivityTestRule into my unit test class?)