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The Java Workshop

You're reading from   The Java Workshop Learn object-oriented programming and kickstart your career in software development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838986698
Length 606 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Eric Foster-Johnson Eric Foster-Johnson
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Eric Foster-Johnson
Andreas Göransson Andreas Göransson
Author Profile Icon Andreas Göransson
Andreas Göransson
David Cuartielles David Cuartielles
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David Cuartielles
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning the Basics 3. Object-Oriented Programming 4. Collections, Lists and Java's Built-In APIs 5. Exceptions 6. Libraries, Packages, and Modules 7. Databases and JDBC 8. Sockets, Files, and Streams 9. Working with HTTP 10. Encryption 11. Processes 12. Regular Expressions 13. Functional Programming with Lambda Expressions 14. Recursion 15. Processing Data with Streams 16. Predicates and Other Functional Interfaces 17. Reactive Programming with Java Flow 18. Unit Testing Appendix

Summary

This chapter introduced unit testing. Testing is good and you want to write tests for all your Java code. If you write successful tests, then you can feel confident your code was written correctly.

JUnit provides the most popular testing framework for writing Java unit tests, though there are other frameworks you can try as well. The @Test annotation on a method tells JUnit that the given code is considered a test. JUnit will execute the test and see whether it succeeds. The JUnit assertions class contains a few static methods that you can use to verify the test results.

A parameterized test is a test into which you pass a few parameters. This is very useful when writing tests for code that you want to ensure can handle a variety of inputs. Mocking is a technique where you mock out external dependencies so that a unit test can concentrate on testing just one class.

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