Hi Richard, I also just tried to add the same test to uimaFIT JCasUtilTest, replacing SubType with Token as well, but keeping the code that creates the JCas using JCasFactory. In this project it fails as well. So, I guess the problem must somehow be related to the uimaFIT use. Maybe you could confirm it fails for you in this case as well.
Cheers Mario On 3 Nov 2020, at 13.52, Mario Juric <mario.ju...@cactusglobal.com<mailto:mario.ju...@cactusglobal.com>> wrote: Hi Richard, I was in the middle of reporting the issue in JIra, when I received your mail. The test fails in my project, but it passes when I do like you do. Don’t know what the difference is, except that we use uiamFIT in our project. I also tried to define SubType manually outside the XML type description, and it worked in this case in my project as well, e.g. just added this static class to the test class. public static class SubType extends Annotation { public SubType(JCas jcas, int begin, int end) { super(jcas, begin, end); } } I actually don’t have a clue why I am seeing this difference in behaviour. Cheers Mario On 3 Nov 2020, at 13.03, Richard Eckart de Castilho <r...@apache.org<mailto:r...@apache.org>> wrote: External email – Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know that the content is safe. On 3. Nov 2020, at 11:42, Richard Eckart de Castilho <r...@apache.org<mailto:r...@apache.org>> wrote: I checked out the latest from master and installed it, but the unit test still fails in the same way. roger, I'll check it out. If you want to do me a favor, please open an issue on Jira and put your test case code there. I removed the uimaFIT references from your code and dropped it into the org.apache.uima.cas.impl.SelectFsTest test class in uimaj-core of the master branch. Instead of the SubType type, I used the "x.y.z.Token" type which is already available in the uimaj-core test code (inherits from Annotation). For me, the test runs... Did I accidentally mutilate your test? -- Richard @Test public void verify_selectCovered() throws Exception { JCas jCas = cas.getJCas(); Annotation[] fixture = new Annotation[] { new Annotation(jCas, 5, 10), new Annotation(jCas, 5, 15), new Annotation(jCas, 0, 10), new Annotation(jCas, 0, 15), new Annotation(jCas, 5, 7), new Annotation(jCas, 8, 10), new Annotation(jCas, 6, 9), new Annotation(jCas, 5, 10) }; Stream.of(fixture).forEach(Annotation::addToIndexes); List<Annotation> selection1 = jCas.select(Annotation.class) .coveredBy(fixture[0]) .collect(Collectors.toList()); assertEquals(4, selection1.size()); Token subType = new Token(jCas, 5, 10); subType.addToIndexes(); List<Annotation> selection2 = jCas.select(Annotation.class) .coveredBy(subType) .collect(Collectors.toList()); assertEquals(5, selection2.size()); // Fails! } ________________________________ Disclaimer: This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and directed solely for the use of the intended addressee or addressees and may contain information that is legally privileged, confidential, and exempt from disclosure. If you have received this email in error, please notify the sender by telephone, fax, or return email and immediately delete this email and any files transmitted along with it. Unintended recipients are not authorized to disclose, disseminate, distribute, copy or take any action in reliance on information contained in this email and/or any files attached thereto, in any manner other than to notify the sender; any unauthorized use is subject to legal prosecution.