Für Kotlin:
build gradle:
testImplementation "com.nhaarman.mockitokotlin2:mockito-kotlin:2.2.0"
code:
interface MyCallback {
fun someMethod(value: String)
}
class MyTestableManager(private val callback: MyCallback){
fun perform(){
callback.someMethod("first")
callback.someMethod("second")
callback.someMethod("third")
}
}
test:
import com.nhaarman.mockitokotlin2.times
import com.nhaarman.mockitokotlin2.verify
import com.nhaarman.mockitokotlin2.mock
...
val callback: MyCallback = mock()
val uut = MyTestableManager(callback)
uut.perform()
val captor: KArgumentCaptor = com.nhaarman.mockitokotlin2.argumentCaptor()
verify(callback, times(3)).someMethod(captor.capture())
assertTrue(captor.allValues[0] == "first")
assertTrue(captor.allValues[1] == "second")
assertTrue(captor.allValues[2] == "third")
Für Java:
Lombok verwendet, um zu vereinfachen. Sie können auch den Konstruktor ausschreiben, wenn Sie möchten.
build gradle:
testImplementation "org.mockito:mockito-core:3.6.28"
code:
// MyCallback.java
public interface MyCallback {
void someMethod(String value);
}
// MyTestableManager.java
public class MyTestableManager {
private MyCallback callback;
public MyTestableManager(MyCallback callback) {
this.callback = callback;
}
public void perform(){
callback.someMethod("first");
callback.someMethod("second");
callback.someMethod("third");
}
}
test:
import org.mockito.Mockito.times;
import org.mockito.Mockito.verify;
import org.mockito.Mock;
import org.mockito.Captor;
// whatever other imports you need
@Mock
private MyCallback callback;
@Captor
private ArgumentCaptor captor;
private MyTestableManager uut = new MyTestableManager(callback);
// in your test method:
uut.perform()
verify(callback, times(3)).someMethod(captor.capture())
assertTrue(captor.getAllValues().get(0) == "first")
assertTrue(captor.getAllValues().get(1) == "second")
assertTrue(captor.getAllValues().get(2) == "third")