I want to know how I can mock an indexed property and there are many questions on this:
- Moq an indexed property and use the index value in the return/callback
- How to MOQ an Indexed property
- How to Moq Setting an Indexed property
et al. But in my case there is an added complexity. The indexed property is readonly. So, I need to be able to test a piece of code that does the following
if (workbook.Worksheets.Cast<IWorksheet>().Any(
ws => ws.Name.CompareNoCase(Keywords.Master)))
{
...
}
where we have the following class structure
public interface IWorkbook
{
IWorksheets Worksheets { get; }
}
public interface IWorksheets : IEnumerable
{
IWorksheet this[int index] { get; }
IWorksheet this[string name] { get; }
int Count { get; }
IWorksheet Add();
IWorksheet AddAfter(IWorksheet sheet);
IWorksheet AddBefore(IWorksheet sheet);
bool Contains(IWorksheet worksheet);
}
public interface IWorksheet
{
string Name { get; set; }
}
So in my test method, I have tried (and failed) to do this by overriding the GetEnumerator()
method as this is exactly what Cast()
calls; I do this as follows:
List<string> fakeSheetNames = new List<string>()
{
"Master", "A", "B", "C", "__ParentA", "D", "wsgParentB", "E", "F","__ParentC", "__ParentD", "G"
};
List<IWorksheet> worksheetMockList = new List<IWorksheet>();
foreach (string name in fakeSheetNames)
{
Mock<IWorksheet> tmpMock = new Mock<IWorksheet>();
tmpMock.Setup(p => p.Name).Returns(name);
tmpMock.Setup(p => p.Visible)
.Returns(parentPrefixes.Any(p => name.StartsWith(p)) ?
SheetVisibility.Hidden :
SheetVisibility.Visible);
worksheetMockList.Add(tmpMock.Object);
}
Mock<IWorkbook> mockWorkbook = new Mock<IWorkbook>();
mockWorkbook
.Setup(p => p.Worksheets.GetEnumerator())
.Returns(worksheetMockList.GetEnumerator());
// I can't do this as per the threads referenced above, as the property is read only.
//for (int i = 0; i < worksheetMockList.Count; ++i)
//mockWorkbook.SetupGet(p => p.Worksheets[i] = worksheetMockList[i])...
How can I mock my workbook.Worksheets
read only iterator property?
I have one more level of abstraction. I need to add the IWorkbook
to an IWorkbooks
collection (like we did for IWorksheets
). I did not put this in the original question as it is merely doing the same thing as we did for IWorksheets
, how ever it does not work. The interfaces are
public interface IWorkbookSet
{
...
IWorkbooks Workbooks { get; }
}
and
public interface IWorkbooks : IEnumerable
{
IWorkbook this[int index] { get; }
IWorkbook this[string name] { get; }
int Count { get; }
...
}
So to attempt to handle this I am mocking in the following fashion following the great answer below. However, the loops below do not work as expected.
List<string> fakeSheetNames = new List<string>()
{
"Master",
"A",
"B",
"C",
"__ParentA",
"D",
"wsgParentB",
"E",
"F",
"__ParentC",
"__ParentD",
"G"
};
Mock<IWorkbook> mockWorkbook = new Mock<IWorkbook>();
List<IWorksheet> worksheetMockList = new List<IWorksheet>();
foreach (string name in fakeSheetNames)
{
Mock<IWorksheet> tmpWorksheetMock = new Mock<IWorksheet>();
tmpWorksheetMock.Setup(p => p.Name).Returns(name);
tmpWorksheetMock.Setup(p => p.Visible)
.Returns(parentPrefixes.Any(p => name.StartsWith(p)) ?
SheetVisibility.Hidden :
SheetVisibility.Visible);
worksheetMockList.Add(tmpWorksheetMock.Object);
}
var mockWorksheets = new Mock<IWorksheets>();
mockWorksheets.Setup(m => m[It.IsAny<int>()]).Returns<int>(index => worksheetMockList[index]);
mockWorksheets.Setup(m => m.GetEnumerator()).Returns(worksheetMockList.GetEnumerator());
mockWorkbook
.Setup(p => p.Worksheets)
.Returns(mockWorksheets.Object);
mockWorkbook.Setup(p => p.Name).Returns("Name");
mockWorkbook.Setup(p => p.FullName).Returns("FullName");
// This works.
foreach (IWorksheet ws in mockWorkbook.Object.Worksheets)
Trace.WriteLine(ws.Name);
mockWorkbookSet = new Mock<IWorkbookSet>();
var mockWorkbooks = new Mock<IWorkbooks>();
List<IWorkbook> workbookMockList = new List<IWorkbook>() { mockWorkbook.Object };
mockWorkbooks.Setup(m => m[It.IsAny<int>()]).Returns<int>(index => workbookMockList[index]);
mockWorkbooks.Setup(m => m.GetEnumerator()).Returns(workbookMockList.GetEnumerator());
mockWorkbookSet
.Setup(p => p.Workbooks)
.Returns(mockWorkbooks.Object);
// Count is zero here??
foreach (IWorkbook wb in mockWorkbookSet.Object.Workbooks)
Trace.WriteLine(wb.Worksheets.Count);
Thanks very much.
Edit #2: Using your code I have some interesting behavior...
// Setup test.
var workbookSet = mockWorkbookSet.Object;
var actual = workbookSet
.Workbooks[expectedWorkBooksIndex]
.Worksheets[expectedWorkSheetIndex];
// This prints "A" - GOOD!
Trace.WriteLine("Actual " + actual.Name);
// This passes.
Assert.AreEqual(expected, actual);
// This works.
foreach (IWorksheet ws in mockWorkbook.Object.Worksheets)
Trace.WriteLine(ws.Name);
// This works.
Trace.WriteLine(mockWorkbookSet.Object.Workbooks[0].Name);
// This does not write anything - WHY?
foreach (IWorksheet ws in mockWorkbookSet.Object.Workbooks[0].Worksheets.Cast<IWorksheet>())
Trace.WriteLine(ws.Name);
// This fails.
foreach (IWorkbook workbook in workbookSet.Workbooks.Cast<IWorkbook>())
Assert.IsTrue(workbook.Worksheets.Count > 0);