3 Integrations with HUnit
View a list of HUnit integrations and software that integrates with HUnit below. Compare the best HUnit integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with HUnit. Here are the current HUnit integrations in 2025:
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1
JUnit
JUnit
JUnit 5 is the next generation of JUnit. The goal is to create an up-to-date foundation for developer-side testing on the JVM. This includes focusing on Java 8 and above, as well as enabling many different styles of testing. We ask you – our users – to support us so we can keep up the pace. We will continue our work on JUnit regardless of how many donations we receive. However, your support would enable us to do so with greater focus and not only on weekends or in our spare time. For example, we want to meet regularly and work colocated for a few days in order to get things done faster in face-to-face design and coding sessions. Your donations will help to make that a reality! -
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Codecov
Codecov
Develop healthier code. Improve your code review workflow and quality. Codecov provides highly integrated tools to group, merge, archive, and compare coverage reports. Free for open source. Plans starting at $10/user per month. Ruby, Python, C++, Javascript, and more. Plug and play into any CI product and workflow. No setup required. Automatic report merging for all CI and languages into a single report. Get custom statuses on any group of coverage metrics. Review coverage reports by project, folder and type test (unit tests vs integration tests). Detailed report commented directly into your pull request. Codecov is SOC 2 Type II certified, which means a third-party audits and attests to our practices to secure our systems and your data.Starting Price: $10 per user per month -
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Haskell
Haskell
Every expression in Haskell has a type that is determined at compile time. All the types composed together by function application have to match up. If they don't, the program will be rejected by the compiler. Types become not only a form of guarantee, but a language for expressing the construction of programs. Every function in Haskell is a function in the mathematical sense (i.e., "pure"). Even side-effecting IO operations are but a description of what to do, produced by pure code. There are no statements or instructions, only expressions that cannot mutate variables (local or global) nor access state like time or random numbers. You don't have to explicitly write out every type in a Haskell program. Types will be inferred by unifying every type bidirectionally. However, you can write out types if you choose, or ask the compiler to write them for you for handy documentation.Starting Price: Free
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