show/hide this revision's text 2 Added example.

Tests that check for more than one thing aren't usually recommended because they are more tightly coupled and brittle. If you change something in the code, it'll take longer to change the test, since there are more things to account for.

[Edit:] Ok, say this is a sample test method:

[TestMethod]
public void TestSomething() {
  // Test condition A
  // Test condition B
  // Test condition C
  // Test condition D
}

If your test for condition A fails, then B, C, and D will appear to fail as well, and won't provide you with any usefulness. What if your code change would have caused C to fail as well? If you had split them out into 4 separate tests, you would know this.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Tests that check for more than one thing aren't usually recommended because they are more tightly coupled and brittle. If you change something in the code, it'll take longer to change the test, since there are more things to account for.