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I'm new to mocks and am deciding on a mock framework. The Moq home quotes

Currently, it's the only mocking library that goes against the generalized and somewhat unintuitive (especially for novices) Record/Reply approach from all other frameworks.

Can anyone explain simply what the Record/Replay approach is and how Moq differs? What are the pros and cons of each especially from the point of deciding a framework?

Thanks.

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2 Answers

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The Record/Replay approach is used by RhinoMocks. The basic idea is that your test execution is divided into two phases, the record and the replay fase. To be a little bit more concrete

var repo = new MockRepository();
var dependency = repo.DynamicMock<IDependency>();
With.Mocks(repo).Expecting(delegate
    						   {
	    						   Expect.Call(dependency.AMethod(1)).Return(result);					   
						       }).Verify(delegate
								    		 {
									    		 var sut = new Sut(wrappee);
										    	 sut.DoStuffThatCallsAMethod();
											    Assert.IsTrue(sut.ResultState);
										 });

So the Expecting block is the Record phase and the Verify block is the Replay phase.

The Moq variant of this code would be

var dependency = new Mock<IDependency>();
dependency.Expect(dep => dep.AMethod(1)).Returns(result);   	   
var sut = new Sut(wrappee.Object);
sut.DoStuffThatCallsAMethod();
Assert.IsTrue(sut.ResultState);

Which as you can see is much nicer to read. I used to use RhinoMocks but since I discovered Moq I only use Moq. I find it to be produce much more readable code. So my advice would be to go for Moq.

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This answer doesn't make much sense to me. Sure, the Moq variant is simpler, but you still have those two phases in the test: line 2 (with the call to "Expect") belongs to the "record" phase, while lines 3 and 4 belong to the "replay" phase. I don't think that mere differences in syntax are essential to what the "record/replay" model is. – Rogerio Liesenfeld Aug 5 at 17:26
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I've gone right off Record/Replay because it makes it hard to see in the setup what's stubbed/mocked or just running code. I believe that Rhino has multiple ways of working. In particular, you can use a using() block to isolate setup from other calls.

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