// Copyright 2009 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved.
package org.waveprotocol.wave.model.util;
import junit.framework.TestCase;
/**
* Tests for value utility methods.
*
* @author anorth@google.com (Alex North)
*/
public class ValueUtilsTest extends TestCase {
public void testNullValuesEqual() {
assertTrue(ValueUtils.equal(null, null));
assertFalse(ValueUtils.notEqual(null, null));
}
public void testOneNullNotEqual() {
assertFalse(ValueUtils.equal(null, "foo"));
assertTrue(ValueUtils.notEqual(null, "foo"));
assertFalse(ValueUtils.equal("foo", null));
assertTrue(ValueUtils.notEqual("foo", null));
}
public void testEqualValues() {
assertTrue(ValueUtils.equal(foo(), foo()));
assertFalse(ValueUtils.notEqual(foo(), foo()));
}
public void testUnequalValues() {
assertFalse(ValueUtils.equal(foo(), "bar"));
assertTrue(ValueUtils.notEqual(foo(), "bar"));
}
public void testDefaultValues() {
assertEquals("aa", ValueUtils.valueOrDefault("aa", "bb"));
assertEquals("bb", ValueUtils.valueOrDefault(null, "bb"));
String empty = null;
assertEquals(null, ValueUtils.valueOrDefault(null, empty));
}
/**
* Creates a new instance of a string equal to "foo". Use this to
* exercise String.equals() rather than relying on reference equality
* of interned strings.
*/
private String foo() {
return new String("foo");
}
}