XspecT 16.0.2-preview

This is a prerelease version of XspecT.
There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package XspecT --version 16.0.2-preview                
NuGet\Install-Package XspecT -Version 16.0.2-preview                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="XspecT" Version="16.0.2-preview" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add XspecT --version 16.0.2-preview                
#r "nuget: XspecT, 16.0.2-preview"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install XspecT as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=XspecT&version=16.0.2-preview&prerelease

// Install XspecT as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=XspecT&version=16.0.2-preview&prerelease                

XspecT: A fluent unit testing framework

Framework for writing and running automated tests in .Net in a fluent style, based on the popular "Given-When-Then" pattern, built upon XUnit, Moq, AutoMock, AutoFixture and FluentAssertions.

Whether you are beginner or expert in unit-testing, this framework will help you to write more descriptive, concise and maintainable tests.

Usage

It is assumed that you are already familiar with Xunit and Moq, or similar test- and mocking frameworks. There is an accompanying independent assertion framework called XspecT.Assert, which is built upon FluentAssertions, but with a less worthy syntax, based on the verbs Is, Has and Does instead of Should.

Is-assertions are recommended over Should-assertions for making the tests read more like specifications, listing requirements rather than asserting expected results.

This is an example of a complete test class (specification) with one test method (requirement):

using XspecT.Verification;
using XspecT.Fixture;

using static App.Calculator;

namespace App.Test;

public class CalculatorSpec : Spec<int>
{
    [Fact] public void WhenAdd_1_and_2_ThenSumIs_3() => When(_ => Add(1, 2)).Then().Result.Is(3);
}

When() is setting up the method to be called and Then() runs the test pipeline and provides the result.

Test a static method with [Theory]

If you are used to writing one test class per production class and use Theory for test input, you can use a similar style with XspecT. First you create your test-class overriding Spec<[ReturnType]> with the expected return type as generic argument. Then create a test-method, attributed with Theory and InlineData, called When[Something]. This method call When to setup the test pipeline with test data and the method to test. Finally verify the result by calling Then().Result (or only Result) on the returned pipeline and check the result with Is.

Example:

using XspecT.Verification;
using XspecT.Fixture;

using static App.Calculator;

namespace App.Test;

public class CalculatorSpec : Spec<int>
{
    [Theory]
    [InlineData(1, 1, 2)]
    [InlineData(3, 4, 7)]
    public void GivenTwoNumbers_WhenAdd_ReturnSum(int term1, int term2, int sum)
        => When(_ => Add(term1, term2)).Then().Result.Is(sum);

    [Theory]
    [InlineData(1, 1, 1)]
    [InlineData(3, 4, 12)]
    public void WhenMultiplyThenReturnProduct(int factor1, int factor2, int product)
        => When(_ => Multiply(factor1, factor2)).Then().Result.Is(product);
}

For more complex and realistic scenarios, it is recommended to create tests in a separate project from the production code, named [MyProject].Spec. The test-project should mimmic the production project's folder structure, but in addition have one folder for each class to test, named as the class. Within that folder, create one test-class per method to test.

Test a static void method

  • When testing a static void method, there is no return value to verify in result and by convention the generic TResult parameter should be set to object.
  • However you can use Throws or NotThrows to verify exceptions thrown.

Example:

namespace MyProject.Test.Validator;

public abstract class WhenVerifyAreEqual : Spec<object>
{
    protected WhenVerifyAreEqual() 
        => When(_ => MyProject.Validator.VerifyAreEqual(An<int>(), ASecond<int>()));

    public class Given_1_And_2 : WhenVerifyAreEqual
    {
        [Fact] public void ThenThrows_NotEqual() => Given(1, 2).Then().Throws<NotEqual>();
    }

    public class Given_2_And_2 : WhenVerifyAreEqual
    {
        [Fact] public void ThenDoNotThrow() => Given(2, 2).Then().DoesNotThrow();
    }
}

Test a class with dependencies

  • To test an instance method [MyClass].[MyMethod], create an abstract class named When[MyMethod] inheriting XspecT.Spec<[MyClass], [TheResult]>.

  • The subject under test will be created automatically with mocks and default values by AutoMock.

  • Subject-under-test is available as the single input parameter to the lambda that is provided to the method When You can supply or modify you own constructor arguments by calling Given or Given().Using.

  • To mock behaviour of any dependency call Given<[TheService]>().That(_ => _.[TheMethod](...)).Returns/Throws(...).

  • To verify a call to a dependency, write Then<[TheService]>([SomeLambdaExpression]).

  • Both mocking and verification of behaviour is based on Moq framework.

Example:

namespace MyProject.Spec.ShoppingService;

public abstract class WhenPlaceOrder : Spec<MyProject.ShoppingService, object>
{
    protected WhenPlaceOrder() 
        => When(_ => _.PlaceOrder(An<int>()))
        .Given<ICartRepository>().That(_ => _.GetCart(The<int>()))
        .Returns(() => A<Cart>(_ => _.Id = The<int>()));

    [Fact] public void ThenOrderIsCreated() => Then<IOrderService>(_ => _.CreateOrder(The<Cart>()));

    [Fact] public void ThenLogsOrderCreated()
        => Then<ILogger>(_ => _.Information($"OrderCreated from Cart {The<int>()}"));
}

All the examples above also works for async methods.

More examples and features can be found as Unit tests in the source code.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages

This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

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