Three points about JUnit:
Tests should be precise, they should pass or fail unambiguously based solely on how the test inputs are set up.
Tests should have failures reported back into the framework.
Tests should not rely on having their output read.
Your example fails on all three counts. If an exception gets thrown or not, the test still passes. If an exception is thrown JUnit never finds out about it and can't include it in the test results. The only way to know something went wrong is to read what the test writes to stdout, which makes errors too easy to ignore. This is not a useful way to write tests.
JUnit was designed to make doing the right thing easy and to give developers useful feedback. If an exception gets thrown from a test method, it gets caught by the framework. If the test was annotated with an exception indicating that exception is expected, then the framework marks the test as passing. Otherwise the framework fails the test and records the stacktrace for reporting. The framework reports what assertions fail and what unexpected exceptions occurred so that everybody knows if the tests worked or not.
If you expect a test to succeed without throwing an exception, then if anything in the test can throw a checked exception, add throws Exception
to the test method signature. Adding the throws
to the signature doesn't say the method has to throw anything, it just lets any exceptions that happen to occur get thrown so that the test framework can catch them.
The only instance where you would actually catch the exception in the test is where you want to test assertions about the exception; for instance, you could test that the message on the exception is what you expect, or if the exception has a cause set on it. In that case you would add Assert.fail()
at the end of the try-block so that not having an exception thrown will cause the test to fail.
It isn’t having a try-catch block that is so bad, it’s the absence of anything that will cause the test to fail that is bad.
When you write a test at first, make it fail. That way you prove to yourself that you know what the test is doing, and you confirm that, when there is a failure, you will be made aware of it.