How to implement XUnit descriptive Assert message?

C#Unit TestingXunitAssertionsXunit2

C# Problem Overview


Context

in XUnit github I found this: Add Assert.Equal(expected, actual, message) overload #350 (so a developer ask for a non existing overload see below)

Quote from the answer:

> We are a believer in self-documenting code; that includes your assertions.

(so the XUnit team rejects it)

OK, I got it. I also believe the self documenting code. Still I can not find out this use case:

Sample

// Arrange
// Create some external soap service client and its wrapper classes

// Act
// client.SomeMethod();

// Assert
// Sorry, soap service's interface, behaviour and design is *given*
// So I have to check if there is no Error, and 
// conveniently if there is, then I would like to see it in the assertion message

Assert.Equal(0, client.ErrorMessage.Length); // Means no error

// I would like to have the same result what would be the following *N*U*n*i*t* assert:
// Assert.AreEqual(0, client.ErrorMessage.Length, client.ErrorMessage); // Means no error

Question

How can I implement a descriptive assert message in this case in XUnit which still has no such an overload?

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

Use the suggestions provided at the link. Like fluent assertions or create your own assertion that wraps the Assert.True or Assert.False which were left with their message overloads. It was mentioned further down

Quote > You can provide messages to Assert.True and .False. If you simply > cannot live without messages (and refuse to use a different > assertion), you could always fall back to: > > Assert.True(number == 2, "This is my message");

Quote:

> If you really want to have messages you could add Fluent > Assertions or maybe > xbehave > to your test projects and use their syntax. >Fluent Assertions even throws xunit.net exceptions if it encounters its presence.

Solution 2 - C#

I was having the same issue. I've a test that pulls data from two web api's and then compares and asserts various things about the content. I started using standard XUnit assertions like:

Assert.Equal(HttpStatusCode.OK, response1.StatusCode);
Assert.Equal(HttpStatusCode.OK, response2.StatusCode);

But whilst this gives a useful message that a 404 has been returned, it not clear from the logs on our build/CI server which service caused the error message.

I ended up adding my own assertion to give context:

public class MyEqualException : Xunit.Sdk.EqualException
{
    public MyEqualException(object expected, object actual, string userMessage)
        : base(expected, actual)
    {
        UserMessage = userMessage;
    }

    public override string Message => UserMessage + "\n" + base.Message;
}

public static class AssertX
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Verifies that two objects are equal, using a default comparer.
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="T">The type of the objects to be compared</typeparam>
    /// <param name="expected">The expected value</param>
    /// <param name="actual">The value to be compared against</param>
    /// <param name="userMessage">Message to show in the error</param>
    /// <exception cref="MyEqualException">Thrown when the objects are not equal</exception>
    public static void Equal<T>(T expected, T actual, string userMessage)
    {
        bool areEqual;

        if (expected == null || actual == null)
        {
            // If either null, equal only if both null
            areEqual = (expected == null && actual == null);
        }
        else
        {
            // expected is not null - so safe to call .Equals()
            areEqual = expected.Equals(actual);
        }

        if (!areEqual)
        {
            throw new MyEqualException(expected, actual, userMessage);
        }
    }
}

Then I can do the same assertions as:

AssertX.Equal(HttpStatusCode.OK, response1.StatusCode, $"Fetching {Uri1}");
AssertX.Equal(HttpStatusCode.OK, response2.StatusCode, $"Fetching {Uri2}");

and the error log gives the actual,expected and prepends my message about which webapi was the culprit.

I realise I'm late to answer, but figured this might help others searching for a practical solution that don't have time to install/learn yet another test framework just to get useful information out of test failures.

Solution 3 - C#

Using a try/catch was enough for my purposes:

try
{
    Assert.Equal(expectedErrorCount, result.Count);
}
catch (EqualException ex)
{
    throw new XunitException($"{testMsg}\n{ex}");
}

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questiong.pickardouView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#NkosiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#GrhmView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#Peter LView Answer on Stackoverflow