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I've written a piece of code that is responsible for creating an Issue.It uses a visitor pattern to set the Issue assignee. Here's the code :

public Issue CreateIssue(IssueType type, string subject, string description, Priority priority, string ownerId)
        {
            var issue = new Issue
            {
                ...
            };
            IssueManagerContext.Current.IssueAssignmentMethodResolver(type).Visit(issue);
            ...
            return issue;
        }

I would like to test the functionality of this code thus somehow I need to mock the behavior of a visitor. After studying different Mock libraries I decided to use Moq. But I don't know how should I build a mock object that gets an argument from my code instead of hard coding it as it's shown in the quick start guide.

Here's what I have done so far :

var visitor = new Mock<IIssueVisitor>();
visitor.Setup(x => x.Visit(null));

2 Answers 2

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You can only match a specific instance of an object if the test has the same reference as the SUT. The problem in your scenario is that your SUT creates the instance issue, and returns it at the end of the method. Your test cannot access it while the method is executing, which precludes your mock object from being able to match it.

You can configure your mock object to match any Issue instance with the following syntax:

    visitor.Setup(x => x.Visit(It.IsAny<Issue>()));

You can also configure the mock to conditionally match an Issue instance:

    // Matches any instance of Issue that has an ID of 42
    visitor.Setup(x => x.Visit(It.Is<Issue>(theIssue => theIssue.ID == 42)));

If you want to match the reference of a specific instance of Issue, then you'll have to move the instantiation logic into some kind of abstraction (e.g., a factory) of which your test could provide a fake implementation. For example:

    // In SUT
    var issue = issueFactory.CreateIssue();
    ...

    // In test
    var stubIssue = new Issue{ ... };
    var issueFactory = new Mock<IIssueFactory>();
    var visitor = new Mock<IIssueVisitor>();
    ...        
    issueFactory.Setup(factory => factory.CreateIssue())
        .Returns(stubIssue);

    visitor.Setup(x => x.Visit(stubIssue));
2
  • Thanks for your complete answer :) the problem is my Create method is in fact a factory method itself. But It.IsAny<T> is suffice in my scenario. Jun 23, 2014 at 8:53
  • 1
    Ahh. That does set things in a different perspective. :-)
    – Lilshieste
    Jun 23, 2014 at 10:50
1

Use the following syntax:

interface IFoo
{
    int Bar(string baz);
}

var mock = new Mock<IFoo>();
mock.Setup(x => x.Bar(It.IsAny<string>()))
    .Returns((string baz) => 42 /* Here baz contains the value your code provided */);

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