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    copied!<p>IMHO Reflection should really only be a last resort, reserved for the special case of unit testing legacy code or an API you can't change. If you are testing your own code, the fact that you need to use Reflection means your design is not testable, so you should fix that instead of resorting to Reflection.</p> <p>If you need to access private members in your unit tests, it usually means the class in question has an unsuitable interface, and/or tries to do too much. So either its interface should be revised, or some code should be extracted into a separate class, where those problematic methods / field accessors can be made public.</p> <p>Note that using Reflection in general results in code which, apart from being harder to understand and maintain, is also more fragile. There are a whole set of errors which in the normal case would be detected by the compiler, but with Reflection they crop up as runtime exceptions only.</p> <p><strong>Update:</strong> as @tackline noted, this concerns only using Reflection within one's own test code, not the internals of the testing framework. JUnit (and probably all other similar frameworks) uses reflection to identify and call your test methods - this is a justified and localized use of reflection. It would be difficult or impossible to provide the same features and convenience without using Reflection. OTOH it is completely encapsulated within the framework implementation, so it does not complicate or compromise our own testing code.</p>
 

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