JUnit test case for Java Runnable run
I want my program to run fine even though there is an exception. The following does that. Can someone help me writing JUnit test case for this?
protected static Runnable myMethod=new Runnable()
@Override
public void run()
try
//my code - may raise exception
catch (Throwable t)
logger.error("Exception occured", t.getMessage());
;
java multithreading junit mockito runnable
add a comment |
I want my program to run fine even though there is an exception. The following does that. Can someone help me writing JUnit test case for this?
protected static Runnable myMethod=new Runnable()
@Override
public void run()
try
//my code - may raise exception
catch (Throwable t)
logger.error("Exception occured", t.getMessage());
;
java multithreading junit mockito runnable
add a comment |
I want my program to run fine even though there is an exception. The following does that. Can someone help me writing JUnit test case for this?
protected static Runnable myMethod=new Runnable()
@Override
public void run()
try
//my code - may raise exception
catch (Throwable t)
logger.error("Exception occured", t.getMessage());
;
java multithreading junit mockito runnable
I want my program to run fine even though there is an exception. The following does that. Can someone help me writing JUnit test case for this?
protected static Runnable myMethod=new Runnable()
@Override
public void run()
try
//my code - may raise exception
catch (Throwable t)
logger.error("Exception occured", t.getMessage());
;
java multithreading junit mockito runnable
java multithreading junit mockito runnable
asked Nov 15 '18 at 5:37
saisai
5511
5511
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1 Answer
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Throwing an exception up from a @Test
method will cause it to end with an error, which isn't a success. So the textbook approach for such cases is to just set up the conditions, run the method, and assume everything is OK if an exception doesn't cause the test to error:
@Test
public void testMyLogic()
// Set up conditions that would cause an the Runnable's body to throw an exception
myMethod.run();
// If we got here an exception was NOT thrown.
// Implicitly, we're OK.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Throwing an exception up from a @Test
method will cause it to end with an error, which isn't a success. So the textbook approach for such cases is to just set up the conditions, run the method, and assume everything is OK if an exception doesn't cause the test to error:
@Test
public void testMyLogic()
// Set up conditions that would cause an the Runnable's body to throw an exception
myMethod.run();
// If we got here an exception was NOT thrown.
// Implicitly, we're OK.
add a comment |
Throwing an exception up from a @Test
method will cause it to end with an error, which isn't a success. So the textbook approach for such cases is to just set up the conditions, run the method, and assume everything is OK if an exception doesn't cause the test to error:
@Test
public void testMyLogic()
// Set up conditions that would cause an the Runnable's body to throw an exception
myMethod.run();
// If we got here an exception was NOT thrown.
// Implicitly, we're OK.
add a comment |
Throwing an exception up from a @Test
method will cause it to end with an error, which isn't a success. So the textbook approach for such cases is to just set up the conditions, run the method, and assume everything is OK if an exception doesn't cause the test to error:
@Test
public void testMyLogic()
// Set up conditions that would cause an the Runnable's body to throw an exception
myMethod.run();
// If we got here an exception was NOT thrown.
// Implicitly, we're OK.
Throwing an exception up from a @Test
method will cause it to end with an error, which isn't a success. So the textbook approach for such cases is to just set up the conditions, run the method, and assume everything is OK if an exception doesn't cause the test to error:
@Test
public void testMyLogic()
// Set up conditions that would cause an the Runnable's body to throw an exception
myMethod.run();
// If we got here an exception was NOT thrown.
// Implicitly, we're OK.
answered Nov 15 '18 at 5:58
MureinikMureinik
187k22141206
187k22141206
add a comment |
add a comment |
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