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I am trying to perform an Unit Testing(Integration Test using Moq) in my code using MVP-VM patterns. I have a view, a viewmodel, and a presenter.

The presenter holds the actual functionality of my UIs.

The way I was trying to test my presenter is, like following.

public interface IMockView : IRealView
{
        event EventHandler ButtonClickedEvent;
}

public interface IMockViewModel :  IRealViewModel 
{  }

public class MockPresenter  :  RealPresenter 
{
    private IMockView _view;
    private IMockViewModel _viewModel;
    public MyProperty { get; set; }

    public MockPresenter  (IMockView  view, IMockViewModel  viewModel) 
        :base(view, viewModel)
    {
        _view = view;
        _viewModel = viewModel;

        view.ButtonClickedEvent += (s, e) =>
                               {
                                     //Do Something 
                                     this.MyProperty = Property retrieved from db.     
                               };
    }
}

And here is my test code.(I am using NUnit Test framework with Moq)

    [Test]
    public void TriggerCreateClicked()
    {
        var view = new Mock<IMockView>();
        var viewModel = new Mock<IMockViewModel>();
        var presenter = new MockPresenter(view.Object,   viewModel.Object);

        viewModel.Setup(x => x.IsValid).Returns(true)
                 .Raises(t => t.ButtonClickedEvent += null, EventArgs.Empty);

        viewModel.Object.IsValid = true;

        Assert.NotNull(presenter.MyProperty);
    }

Basically, on my test case,

If ViewModel.IsValid returns true, I am raising the ButtonClickedEvent. Then, inside of Presenter, I want to retrieve some property from db and store it in MyProperty. Then, I would like to test if this MyProperty is Not Null. If the test went through fine with no exception, presenter that has MyProperty should hold some values.

My question is, is it appropriate for me to create MockPresenter(not interface) that inherits RealPresenter(class) in order to perform Mock Test? Since my code in the RealPresenter does not provide any getters or setters to retrieve this Property, I decided to inherit RealPresenter by MockPresenter class in order not to impact on my RealPresenter. I have not seen any sample codes online that makes my approach feasible.

1 Answer 1

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The first question is whether you are testing only one thing in your test method. In your case, I think you are testing two things in one method: raising event when validation returns true and retrieving data when event is handled. I suggest you separate them into two test methods.

The second question is you use Mock without verifying, which means all mocks in your test method is stubs. I guess in your method at least you will verify one.

The third question is I did not get what your real logic since you put some additional logic in your mock interface and test method.

I think in unit testing of WPF with MVVM, you might not have to test raising event handler since that is .Net framework's job. What you need test is event handler works correctly. If it through command binding you can mock the command to test the calling if command's implementation contains dependencies such database connection.

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  • Hello, Bill, Thank you for your answer. For your question,
    – John Sung
    Jun 28, 2013 at 15:31
  • I am testing only one thing that when user clicks on "Button" on the View, the presenter would raise the event that creates a table and insert it into database. That's why I raised this event on MockPresenter.
    – John Sung
    Jun 28, 2013 at 15:43
  • The reason why I would inherit RealPresenter through MockPresenter is that testmethod inside RealPresenter entails some other stuff that I don't need to test. So what I did was I created MockPresenter that includes the only testable portion(pretty much copy and paste from RealPresenter). Once I create this table through user clicking Button, on my test method, I would raise the event and retrieve that table I created from the db and check if this table is retrieved correctly.
    – John Sung
    Jun 28, 2013 at 15:44
  • For your second question, I think you mean, I would say, view.verify(...) or viewModel.verify(...) Is that what you mean? For your third question, on my view or viewModel interface, there is no other additional logic. Would you please advise me of whether the way I choose to do is appropriate for testing?
    – John Sung
    Jun 28, 2013 at 15:45
  • So the real logic is that user clicks a button on the View, Presenter handles the click event handler, where Presenter creates a table on the View, and when finished it retrieves the data. Since creating table is not testable, you create an event in your mock View and bypass creating table in your mock Presenter's event handler. Am I correct?
    – Bill Zhang
    Jun 28, 2013 at 15:57

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