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by derriz
165 days ago
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I used ResultSet because the comment above mentioned it. A clearer example of what I’m talking about might be say you replace “x.size() > 0” with “!x.isEmpty()” when x is a mocked instance of class X. If tests (authored by someone else) break, I now have to figure out whether the breakage is due to the fact that not enough behavior was mocked or whether I have inadvertently broken something. Maybe it’s actually important that code avoid using “isEmpty”? Or do I just mock the isEmpty call and hope for the best? What if the existing mocked behavior for size() is non-trivial? Typically you’re not dealing with something as obvious. |
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When I use mocking, I try to always use real objects as return values. So if I mock a repository method, like userRepository.search(...) I would return an actual list and not a mocked object. This has worked well for me. If I actually need to test the db query itself, I use a real db