csharp-nunit
Get best practices for NUnit unit testing, including data-driven tests
What this skill does
# NUnit Best Practices
Your goal is to help me write effective unit tests with NUnit, covering both standard and data-driven testing approaches.
## Project Setup
- Use a separate test project with naming convention `[ProjectName].Tests`
- Reference Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk, NUnit, and NUnit3TestAdapter packages
- Create test classes that match the classes being tested (e.g., `CalculatorTests` for `Calculator`)
- Use .NET SDK test commands: `dotnet test` for running tests
## Test Structure
- Apply `[TestFixture]` attribute to test classes
- Use `[Test]` attribute for test methods
- Follow the Arrange-Act-Assert (AAA) pattern
- Name tests using the pattern `MethodName_Scenario_ExpectedBehavior`
- Use `[SetUp]` and `[TearDown]` for per-test setup and teardown
- Use `[OneTimeSetUp]` and `[OneTimeTearDown]` for per-class setup and teardown
- Use `[SetUpFixture]` for assembly-level setup and teardown
## Standard Tests
- Keep tests focused on a single behavior
- Avoid testing multiple behaviors in one test method
- Use clear assertions that express intent
- Include only the assertions needed to verify the test case
- Make tests independent and idempotent (can run in any order)
- Avoid test interdependencies
## Data-Driven Tests
- Use `[TestCase]` for inline test data
- Use `[TestCaseSource]` for programmatically generated test data
- Use `[Values]` for simple parameter combinations
- Use `[ValueSource]` for property or method-based data sources
- Use `[Random]` for random numeric test values
- Use `[Range]` for sequential numeric test values
- Use `[Combinatorial]` or `[Pairwise]` for combining multiple parameters
## Assertions
- Use `Assert.That` with constraint model (preferred NUnit style)
- Use constraints like `Is.EqualTo`, `Is.SameAs`, `Contains.Item`
- Use `Assert.AreEqual` for simple value equality (classic style)
- Use `CollectionAssert` for collection comparisons
- Use `StringAssert` for string-specific assertions
- Use `Assert.Throws<T>` or `Assert.ThrowsAsync<T>` to test exceptions
- Use descriptive messages in assertions for clarity on failure
## Mocking and Isolation
- Consider using Moq or NSubstitute alongside NUnit
- Mock dependencies to isolate units under test
- Use interfaces to facilitate mocking
- Consider using a DI container for complex test setups
## Test Organization
- Group tests by feature or component
- Use categories with `[Category("CategoryName")]`
- Use `[Order]` to control test execution order when necessary
- Use `[Author("DeveloperName")]` to indicate ownership
- Use `[Description]` to provide additional test information
- Consider `[Explicit]` for tests that shouldn't run automatically
- Use `[Ignore("Reason")]` to temporarily skip tests
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