Is org.junit.Assert.assertThat better than org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat?

Michael Osofsky picture Michael Osofsky · Dec 2, 2014 · Viewed 8.2k times · Source

I'm new to JUnit and Hamcrest and would like best-practice advice so I can decided which documentation to study first.

For starters, which of these assertThat methods is better?

  1. org.junit.Assert.assertThat (from junit-4.11.jar)
  2. org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat (from hamcrest-core-1.3.jar)

According to one person last year, "JUnit has the assertThat method, but hamcrest has its own assertThat method that does the same thing.".

According to someone earlier this year, Hamcrest "could potentially give better error messages because the matcher is called to describe the mismatch".

It's hard to tell which versions of Junit and Hamcrest were compared in those posts. So I'd like a recommendation based on the most current released versions.

Answer

dkatzel picture dkatzel · Dec 2, 2014

It's almost the exact same thing.

Recent versions of JUnit now include hamcrest.

In fact, org.junit.Assert.assertThat 's method signature is

public static <T> void assertThat(T actual,
                              org.hamcrest.Matcher<T> matcher)

which you will notice uses hamcrest matchers.

You may still want to include your own version of hamcrest because JUnit isn't updated very often and may not always use the latest version of hamcrest.

According to the maven pom, JUnit 4.11 uses hamcrest 1.3 which I believe is the most current as of this writing.

EDIT I've just read your second article http://blog.code-cop.org/2014/02/assert-or-matcherassert.html and it describes 2 slight differences in the hamcrest assertThat that make it more useful:

  1. when the match fails, the error message includes what was different instead of "expected X but was Y". custom hamcrest matchers may include more detailed information about what exactly was wrong by implementing describeMismatch().
  2. The assertThat signature is different in hamcrest using T actual, Matcher<? super T> matcher which allows matchers to be super types (like Matcher to compare Integers and Doubles). This usually doesn't matter but when you need it this is a nice feature to have.

So use org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat.