The extension method .ShouldHaveChildValidator() in the FluentValidation.TestHelper namespace doesn't have an overload that takes the model. How do I then test that the child validators are set up correctly when using a When() clause like in the following example?

E.g.

public class ParentModel
{
    public bool SomeCheckbox { get; set; }

    public ChildModel SomeProperty { get; set; }
}

public class ParentModelValidator : AbstractValidator<ParentModel>
{
    RuleFor(m => m.SomeProperty)
            .SetValidator(new ChildModelValidator())
            .When(m => m.SomeCheckbox);
}

I want to Assert that if SomeCheckbox is true, then the child validator is present, and if SomeCheckbox is false, then the child validator isn't present.

I have the following so far in the unit test:

ParentModelValidator validator = new ParentModelValidator();
validator.ShouldHaveChildValidator(
    m => m.SomeProperty, 
    typeof(ChildModelValidator));

but that doesn't take into account the .When() condition.

I notice other methods in the FluentValidation.TestHelper namespace such as .ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor() have an overload that takes the model, so it's easy to test a simple property type with a When() clause by setting up a model that satisfies the precondition.

Any ideas?

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I'm having exactly the same problem, solution would be nice. – Tuoski Mar 7 at 12:17
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