001package org.junit.experimental.theories; 002 003import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.FIELD; 004import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.METHOD; 005 006import java.lang.annotation.Retention; 007import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy; 008import java.lang.annotation.Target; 009 010/** 011 * Annotating an array or iterable-typed field or method with @DataPoints 012 * will cause the values in the array or iterable given to be used as potential 013 * parameters for theories in that class when run with the 014 * {@link org.junit.experimental.theories.Theories Theories} runner. 015 * <p> 016 * DataPoints will only be considered as potential values for parameters for 017 * which their types are assignable. When multiple sets of DataPoints exist with 018 * overlapping types more control can be obtained by naming the DataPoints using 019 * the value of this annotation, e.g. with 020 * <code>@DataPoints({"dataset1", "dataset2"})</code>, and then specifying 021 * which named set to consider as potential values for each parameter using the 022 * {@link org.junit.experimental.theories.FromDataPoints @FromDataPoints} 023 * annotation. 024 * <p> 025 * Parameters with no specified source (i.e. without @FromDataPoints or 026 * other {@link org.junit.experimental.theories.ParametersSuppliedBy 027 * @ParameterSuppliedBy} annotations) will use all DataPoints that are 028 * assignable to the parameter type as potential values, including named sets of 029 * DataPoints. 030 * <p> 031 * DataPoints methods whose array types aren't assignable from the target 032 * parameter type (and so can't possibly return relevant values) will not be 033 * called when generating values for that parameter. Iterable-typed datapoints 034 * methods must always be called though, as this information is not available 035 * here after generic type erasure, so expensive methods returning iterable 036 * datapoints are a bad idea. 037 * 038 * <pre> 039 * @DataPoints 040 * public static String[] dataPoints = new String[] { ... }; 041 * 042 * @DataPoints 043 * public static String[] generatedDataPoints() { 044 * return new String[] { ... }; 045 * } 046 * 047 * @Theory 048 * public void theoryMethod(String param) { 049 * ... 050 * } 051 * </pre> 052 * 053 * @see org.junit.experimental.theories.Theories 054 * @see org.junit.experimental.theories.Theory 055 * @see org.junit.experimental.theories.DataPoint 056 * @see org.junit.experimental.theories.FromDataPoints 057 */ 058@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) 059@Target({ FIELD, METHOD }) 060public @interface DataPoints { 061 String[] value() default {}; 062 063 Class<? extends Throwable>[] ignoredExceptions() default {}; 064}