2

Is it possible to have multiple accepted answers in a JUnit test? So for example:

   Main rock = new Main();
   Assert.assertEquals("y", boxes("23"));

So for this test I want to be able to accept the result string "y" or "n" as an acceptable answer, is that possible?

4 Answers 4

4

Using the Hamcrest CoreMatcher (included in JUnit 4.4 and later) and assertThat():

Assert.assertThat(boxes("23"), anyOf(is("y"), is("n"));
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3

You can do it, but not with assertEquals(). Try something like:

Assert.assertTrue(boxes("23").equals("y") || boxes("23").equals("n"));

If you have multiple possible answers, a Set might be easier.

Set<String> possibleAnswers = new HashSet<>();
possibleAnswers.add("y");
possibleAnswers.add("n");
...

Assert.assertTrue(possibleAnswers.contains(boxes("23")));
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  • assertj, truth or hamcrest will generate by far better messages if the expectation will not be met. The suggested solution poorly fails with: 'Expected true, but was false' Sep 21, 2017 at 11:44
1

Assertj is good at this.

import static org.assertj.core.api.Assertions.assertThat;

    assertThat(boxes("23")).isIn("y", "n);

Big plus for assertj compared to hamcrest is easy use of code completion.

0

Apart from the fact that it is possible (e.g. see @dev) it is considered to be a bad practice.

Methods returning different results on the same input must (!) contain a source of non-determinism. To resolve this - mock it correctly and there will be only one result.

An explanation for accepting multiple answers could be that the assert method is called from multiple tests just asserting a generic property of the result. Generic properties could be tested more comfortable with Junit Theories.

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