Can the following unittest be improved, to follow good TDD design practises (naming, using rowtests, designing the classes) in any of the .NET TDD/BDD frameworks?
Also, is there a better way in any of the frameworks to have rowtests where I can have a individual expectation for each row, just like I do it in this (NUnit) example?
The system under test here is the Constraint class that can have multiple ranges of valid integers. The test test the NarrowDown method that can make the valid ranges smaller based on another constraint.
[TestFixture]
internal class ConstraintTests
{
[Test]
public void NarrowDown_Works()
{
RowTest_NarrowDown(
new Range[] { new Range(0, 10), new Range(20, 30), new Range(40, 50) },
new Range[] { new Range(1, 9), new Range(21, 29), new Range(41, 49) },
new Range[] { new Range(1, 9), new Range(21, 29), new Range(41, 49) });
RowTest_NarrowDown(
new Range[] { new Range(0, 10), new Range(20, 30), new Range(40, 50), new Range(60, 70) },
new Range[] { new Range(1, 9), new Range(21, 29), new Range(41, 49) },
new Range[] { new Range(1, 9), new Range(21, 29), new Range(41, 49) });
RowTest_NarrowDown(
new Range[] { new Range(0, 10), new Range(20, 30), new Range(40, 50) },
new Range[] { new Range(1, 9), new Range(21, 29), new Range(41, 49), new Range(60, 70) });
}
private static void RowTest_NarrowDown(IEnumerable<Range> sut, IEnumerable<Range> context)
{
Constraint constraint = new Constraint(sut);
Constraint result = constraint.NarrowDown(new Constraint(context));
Assert.That(result, Is.Null);
}
private static void RowTest_NarrowDown(IEnumerable<Range> sut, IEnumerable<Range> context, IEnumerable<Range> expected)
{
Constraint constraint = new Constraint(sut);
Constraint result = constraint.NarrowDown(new Constraint(context));
Assert.That(result, Is.Not.Null);
Assert.That(result.Bounds, Is.EquivalentTo(expected));
}
}