1

I have a class that converts a string into a DateTime and perform some business logic in it:

public class Foo
{
    public Foo(string value)
    {
        Value = DateTime.Parse(value);
    }

    public DateTime Value { get; }

    // Some additional methods
}

I would like to unit test Foo so that it only accepts valid datetime strings, so I wrote a unit test:

public class FooTests
{
    [Fact]
    public void Foo_ValidDateTimeString_Returns()
    {
        const string testInput = "2015-01-01";

        var result = new Foo(testInput);

        var expected = new DateTime(2015, 1, 1);
        Assert.Equal(expected, result.Value);
    }
}

This test passes in various cultures such as en-US.

My concern is, this unit test will fail when another colleague who is under a different CultureInfo which does not accept yyyy-MM-dd as a valid DateTime format.

I do not want to enforce the test to be run under a specific CultureInfo in order to make the test pass. Is there another way?

2 Answers 2

2

You can always use CultureInfo.InvariantCulture as argument to Parse() method

    Value = DateTime.Parse(value,CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);

so that you don't have to care about culture inside unit-tests. Another way, if you want to keep data as-is the other way is to go for exact parsing

   Value = DateTime.ParseExact(value,"yyyy-MM-dd",CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
2
  • But my intention for Foo is to respect the developer's CurrentCulture and give what they expect (in their local culture), thus I do not want to use ParseExact or the Parse(string, IFormatProvider) overload. Is there another way?
    – rexcfnghk
    Nov 10, 2015 at 9:17
  • @rexcfnghk If you assume they provide correct input then parsing with implicit culture (CurrentCulture) should be fine. However, if you enter date on one machine and parse it on other when culture may be different then you need to enforce some standards.
    – tchrikch
    Nov 10, 2015 at 9:20
1

I do not want to enforce the test to be run under a specific CultureInfo in order to make the test pass. Is there another way?

No.

Using the CurrentCulture on the system is usually a bad idea, because the string that you provided can mean different things for different culture settings.

For example; 2015-01-02 can mean 1st February or 2nd January for different cultures with using DateTime.Parse(string) overload.

DateTime.ParseExact with a specific culture is a much more detailed, controlled and exact approach.

This stated in documentation as well;

Because the Parse(String) method tries to parse the string representation of a date and time using the formatting rules of the current culture, trying to parse a particular string across different cultures can either fail or return different results. If a specific date and time format will be parsed across different locales, use the DateTime.Parse(String, IFormatProvider) method or one of the overloads of the ParseExact method and provide a format specifier.

4
  • But my intention for Foo is to respect the developer's CurrentCulture and give what they expect (in their local culture), thus I do not want to use ParseExact or the Parse(string, IFormatProvider) overload. Is there another way?
    – rexcfnghk
    Nov 10, 2015 at 9:17
  • @rexcfnghk No, as I said, there is no safe way to do it. Why don't you wanna use ParseExact by the way? Is there any special reason? Nov 10, 2015 at 9:21
  • There are no special reasons. It's just my design intention to support this as the API, i.e. if an American developer enters 02-01-2015, that should mean 1st February, 2015; if a British developer enters the same value, it will mean 2nd January, 2015. To clarify I don't really care about the actual date entered because it is only used for some business calculation. I want my API to simply respect the developers' CultureInfo to perform calculation on a date they expect
    – rexcfnghk
    Nov 11, 2015 at 2:32
  • @rexcfnghk If you don't care the parsed DateTime value, maybe you shouldn't parse it at all. If so, just use DateTime.TryParse which takes string[] as a formats and use {"yyyy-MM-dd", "yyyy-dd-MM"} formats available. Then you will not worry the real value of your DateTime. You just check it can be parse or not. Don't worry by the way. There is only 1 culture (Arabic - Saudi Arabia as ar-SA) which can't parse this 2015-01-01 in CultureTypes.AllCultures. But still, this sounds a bad approach to me. Nov 11, 2015 at 11:47

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.