Update[Dec3,08]: Alrighty then.
The test is just testing that the textbox has the value "FirstName" as the Path property of the binding. If I change/refactor FirstName to JustName in the actual data source object, the test would still pass since it is testing against an anonymous type. (Green test when code broken - TDD Antipattern: The Liar)If your aim is to verify that FirstName has been specified in XAML,
Assert.AreEqual("FirstName", txtBoxToProbe.GetBindingExpression(TextBox.TextProperty).ParentBinding.Path.Path);If you really must catch broken bindings via unit tests (and don't want to show the UI), use the real data source... struggled for a while and came up with this.
[Test]public void TestTextBoxBinding() MyWindow w = new MyWindow(); TextBox txtBoxToProbe = w.TextBox1; Object obDataSource = w; // use 'real' data source BindingExpression bindingExpr = BindingOperations.GetBindingExpression(txtBoxToProbe, TextBox.TextProperty); Binding newBind = new Binding(bindingExpr.ParentBinding.Path.Path); newBind.Source = obDataSource; txtBoxToProbe.SetBinding(TextBox.TextProperty, newBind); Assert.AreEqual("Go ahead. Change my value.", txtBoxToProbe.Text);Epilogue:There's some real covert stuff happening in the call to Window.Show(). It somehow magically sets up the DataItem property after which data binding starts working.
// before showbindingExpr.DataItem => nullbindingExpr.Status => BindingStatus.Unattached// after showbindingExpr.DataItem => {Actual Data Source}bindingExpr.Status => BindingStatus.ActiveOnce the Binding is Active, I guess you can force textbox updates via code like this..
txtBoxToProbe.GetBindingExpression(TextBox.TextProperty).UpdateTarget();Once again, I voice my reluctance against this approach. Getting NUnit to run in STA was a pain..
