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Learn Kotlin Programming

You're reading from   Learn Kotlin Programming A comprehensive guide to OOP, functions, concurrency, and coroutines in Kotlin 1.3

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789802351
Length 514 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Stefan Bocutiu Stefan Bocutiu
Author Profile Icon Stefan Bocutiu
Stefan Bocutiu
Stephen Samuel Stephen Samuel
Author Profile Icon Stephen Samuel
Stephen Samuel
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamental Concepts in Kotlin FREE CHAPTER
2. Getting Started with Kotlin 3. Kotlin Basics 4. Object-Oriented Programming in Kotlin 5. Section 2: Practical Concepts in Kotlin
6. Functions in Kotlin 7. Higher-Order Functions and Functional Programming 8. Properties 9. Null Safety, Reflection, and Annotations 10. Generics 11. Data Classes 12. Collections 13. Testing in Kotlin 14. Microservices with Kotlin 15. Section 3: Advanced Concepts in Kotlin
16. Concurrency 17. Coroutines 18. Application of Coroutines 19. Kotlin Serialization 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Table-driven testing

Table driven testing is similar to property-based testing, with the difference being that instead of generators providing random values, the set of input values is manually specified. The way we do this is by declaring a table structure that can be hardcoded into the test or loaded from a file.

The easiest approach is to simply include the table in the test, and this works fine if we have a small range of input values or edge cases that we want to test. For example, we may have a function with three Boolean input values and want to test the combinations. The first step is to define the table that contains the combinations we want to test:

    val table = table( 
      headers("a", "b", "c"), 
      row(true, true, true), 
      row(true, false, true), 
      row(true, false, false) 
    ) 

Notice that we use the headers and row...

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