show/hide this revision's text 2 added 151 characters in body

I'm starting to get comfortable with the idea of fakes, stubs, mocks, and dynamic mocks. But I am still a little iffy in my understanding of when to use partial mocks.

It would seem that if you're planning on mocking a service and need to resort to a partial mock then it is a sign of bad design. Is it that partial mocks are mostly for getting legacy code under test coverage?

On the flip side of this, say I am testing a class which has a Reset() method. If I have already confirmed in a separate test that the Reset() method works, and I have some functionality of the class that should end with a call to this method, is it poor test design to do a partial mock of the object and run tests against the partial mock, defining an Expectation on the Reset() method. Is

I currently have several tests set up in this manner, is this sort of thing going to get me in trouble later on?

show/hide this revision's text 1

When to use partial mocks?

I'm starting to get comfortable with the idea of fakes, stubs, mocks, and dynamic mocks. But I am still a little iffy in my understanding of when to use partial mocks.

It would seem that if you're planning on mocking a service and need to resort to a partial mock then it is a sign of bad design. Is it that partial mocks are mostly for getting legacy code under test coverage?

On the flip side of this, say I am testing a class which has a Reset() method. If I have already confirmed in a separate test that the Reset() method works is it poor test design to do a partial mock of the object and run tests against the partial mock, defining an Expectation on the Reset() method. Is this sort of thing going to get me in trouble later on?