How use Moles for a constructor?

岁酱吖の 提交于 2019-12-07 01:30:49

问题


I have a class like this:

public class Product : IProduct
{
    static private string _defaultName = "default";
    private string _name;
    private float _price;
    /// Constructor
    public Product()
    {
        _price = 10.0F;
    }
    public void ModifyPrice(float modifier)
    {
        _price = _price * modifier;
    }  

I want ModifyPrice to do nothing for a specific value, but I also want to call the constructor that set the price to 10. I tried something like this:

var fake = new SProduct() { CallBase = true };
var mole = new MProduct(fake)
    {
        ModifyPriceSingle = (actual) =>
        {
            if (actual != 20.0f)
            {
                MolesContext.ExecuteWithoutMoles(() => fake.ModifyPrice(actual));
            }
        }
    };
MProduct.Constructor = (@this) => (@this) = fake;

But even if fake is well-initialized with the good constructor, I can't assign it to @this. I also try something like

MProduct.Constructor = (@this) => { var mole = new MProduct(@this)... };

But this time I cannot call my constructor. How am I supposed to do?


回答1:


You don't need to mock the constructor, the parameterless constructor of the Product class already does what you want.

Add some debugging output to Product.

public class Product
{
    private float _price;
    public Product()
    {
        _price = 10.0F;
        Debug.WriteLine("Initializing price: {0}", _price);
    }
    public void ModifyPrice(float modifier)
    {
        _price = _price*modifier;
        Debug.WriteLine("New price: {0}", _price);
    }
}

Mock only the ModifyPrice method.

[TestMethod]
[HostType("Moles")]
public void Test1()
{
    // Call a constructor that sets the price to 10.
    var fake = new SProduct { CallBase = true };
    var mole = new MProduct(fake)
    {
        ModifyPriceSingle = actual =>
        {
            if (actual != 20.0f)
            {
                MolesContext.ExecuteWithoutMoles(() => fake.ModifyPrice(actual));
            }
            else
            {
                Debug.WriteLine("Skipped setting price.");
            }
        }
    };
    fake.ModifyPrice(20f);
    fake.ModifyPrice(21f);
}

See the debug output to confirm everything works as expected:

    Initializing price: 10
    Skipped setting price.
    New price: 210

By the way, you don't need to use the stub here,

var fake = new SProduct { CallBase = true };

creating an instance of Product will suffice.

var fake = new Product();

Update: Mocking a single method can be achieved with the AllInstances class like this

MProduct.Behavior = MoleBehaviors.Fallthrough;
MProduct.AllInstances.ModifyPriceSingle = (p, actual) =>
{
    if (actual != 20.0f)
    {
        MolesContext.ExecuteWithoutMoles(() => p.ModifyPrice(actual));
    }
    else
    {
        Debug.WriteLine("Skipped setting price.");
    }
};

// Call the constructor that sets the price to 10.
Product p1 = new Product();
// Skip setting the price.
p1.ModifyPrice(20f);
// Set the price.
p1.ModifyPrice(21f);



回答2:


MProduct.Behavior = MoleBehaviors.Fallthrough;


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6015173/how-use-moles-for-a-constructor

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