13

In Kotlin M13, this was an acceptable way to create a JUnit rule:

@Rule @publicField val temp = TemporaryFolder()

Now that @publicField has been deprecated, how else can this be achieved? The IDE hint suggests replacing @publicField with lateinit, but lateinit val's are no longer allowed, and I'm not sure this would help even if they were.

3 Answers 3

23

The answer as of Kotlin 1.0 is as follows:

@Rule @JvmField val temp = TemporaryFolder()

@JvmField exposes the backing field with the same visibility as the property, ergo a public field for the JUnit rule to use.

0

If anyone stumble's on this. I believe the approach with JJunit5 would be using @TempDir. https://junit.org/junit5/docs/5.4.2/api/org/junit/jupiter/api/io/TempDir.html

If you would need share the TempDir with tests, it must be a static property of the class. Static for java or within a companion Object for Kotlin

-4

Just guessing, but the following might work (with var):

@Rule lateinit var temp = TemporaryFolder()

I would try asking at kotlin's slack http://t.co/xpQXUKaDvP Currently it's the fastest way to fix anything.

2
  • It does not, JUnit does not see temp as a field in this case, because it isn't actually a field. There is a hidden backing field in there somewhere, and the trick will be how to apply an annotation to it. Oct 2, 2015 at 20:36
  • Sorry, @jkschneider, did you actually checked it to work? Because according to the docs it creates a field and should do the trick. Unfortunately I do not work with JUnit myself.
    – voddan
    Jan 5, 2016 at 4:02

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