Today I saw a JUnit test case with a java assertion instead of the JUnit assertions—Are there significant advantages or disadvantages to prefer one over the other?
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In JUnit4 the exception (actually Error) thrown by a JUnit assert is the same as the error thrown by the java
assert
keyword (AssertionError), so it is exactly the same asassertTrue
and other than the stack trace you couldn't tell the difference.That being said, asserts have to run with a special flag in the JVM, causing many tests to appear to pass just because someone forgot to configure the system with that flag when the JUnit tests were run - not good.
In general, because of this, I would argue that using the JUnit
assertTrue
is the better practice, because it guarantees the test is run, ensures consistency (you sometimes useassertThat
or other asserts that are not a java keyword) and if the behavior of JUnit asserts should change in the future (such as hooking into some kind of filter or other future JUnit feature) your code will be able to leverage that.The real purpose of the assert keyword in java is to be able to turn it off without runtime penalty. That doesn't apply to unit tests.
This may not apply if you exclusively use stuff that's shiny and new, but assert was not introduced into Java until 1.4SE. Therefore, if you must work in an environment with older technology, you may lean towards JUnit for compatibility reasons.
I prefer JUnit assertions as they offer a richer API than the built-in
assert
statement and, more importantly do not need to be explicitly enabled unlikeassert
, which requires the-ea
JVM argument.I'd say use JUnit asserts in test cases, and use java's assert in the code. In other words, real code shall never have JUnit dependencies, as obvious, and if it's a test, it should use the JUnit variations of it, never the assert.
When a test fails you get more infomation.
assertEquals(1, 2);
results injava.lang.AssertionError: expected:<1> but was:<2>
vs
assert(1 == 2);
results injava.lang.AssertionError
you can get even more info if you add the message argument to
assertEquals
I would say if you are using JUnit you should use the JUnit assertions.
assertTrue()
is basically the same asassert
, Otherwise why even use JUnit?