How to set up Mockito to mock class for Android unit test

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梦毁少年i
梦毁少年i 2021-01-13 07:33

If I make a simple test case like

@Test
public void myTest() throws Exception {
    Spanned word = new SpannedString(\"Bird\");
    int length = word.length(         


        
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  • 2021-01-13 08:18

    It is not difficult to set up Mockito in your project. The steps are below.

    1. Add the Mockito dependency

    Assuming you are using the jcenter repository (the default in Android Studio), add the following line to the dependencies block of your app's build.gradle file:

    testImplementation "org.mockito:mockito-core:2.8.47"
    

    You can update the version number to whatever is the most recent Mockito version is.

    It should look something like this:

    dependencies {
        // ...
        testImplementation 'junit:junit:4.12'
        testImplementation "org.mockito:mockito-core:2.8.47"
    }
    

    2. Import Mockito into your test class

    By importing a static class you can make the code more readable (ie, instead of calling Mockito.mock(), you can just use mock()).

    import static org.mockito.Mockito.*;
    

    3. Mock objects in your tests

    You need to do three things to mock objects.

    1. Create a mock of the class using mock(TheClassName.class).
    2. Tell the mocked class what to return for any methods you need to call. You do this using when and thenReturn.
    3. Use the mocked methods in your tests.

    Here is an example. A real test would probably use the mocked value as some sort of input for whatever is being tested.

    public class MyTestClass {
    
        @Test
        public void myTest() throws Exception {
            // 1. create mock
            Spanned word = mock(SpannedString.class);
    
            // 2. tell the mock how to behave
            when(word.length()).thenReturn(4);
    
            // 3. use the mock
            assertEquals(4, word.length());
        }
    }
    

    Further study

    There is a lot more to Mockito. See the following resources to continue your learning.

    • Mockito documentation
    • Unit tests with Mockito - Tutorial
    • Mockito on Android
    • Testing made sweet with a Mockito by Jeroen Mols (YouTube)

    Or try this...

    It is good to learn mocking because it is fast and isolates the code being tested. However, if you are testing some code that uses an Android API, it might be easier to just use an instrumentation test rather than a unit test. See this answer.

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