UseParameters()
controls what parameters are used when naming files.
Verify.TUnit automatically detects the method parameters. So UseParameters()
is not required unless using custom parameters.
For the above scenarios where parameters are not automatically detected:
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
public Task UseParametersUsage(string arg)
{
var somethingToVerify = $"{arg} some text";
return Verify(somethingToVerify)
.UseParameters(arg);
}
If not all parameters are required, a subset can be passed in. In this scenario, the parameters passed in will match with the method parameter names from the start. For example the following will result in a file named ParametersSample.UseParametersSubSet_arg1=Value1_arg2=Value2.verified.txt
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1", "Value2", "Value3")]
public Task UseParametersSubSet(string arg1, string arg2, string arg3)
{
var somethingToVerify = $"{arg1} {arg2} {arg3} some text";
return Verify(somethingToVerify)
.UseParameters(arg1, arg2);
}
If the number of parameters passed to UseParameters()
is greater than the number of parameters in the test method, an exception will be thrown.
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
[Arguments("Value2")]
public Task TestCaseUsage(string arg) =>
Verify(arg);
UseTextForParameters()
can be used to override the substitution text used for the {Parameters}
part of the file convention.
{Directory}/{TestClassName}.{TestMethodName}_{Parameters}_{UniqueFor1}_{UniqueFor2}_{UniqueForX}.verified.{extension}
The below samples produce:
For the instance case:
- TheTest.UseTextForParameters_Value1.verified.txt
- TheTest.UseTextForParameters_Value2.verified.txt
For the fluent case:
- TheTest.UseTextForParametersFluent_Value1.verified.txt
- TheTest.UseTextForParametersFluent_Value2.verified.txt
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
[Arguments("Value2")]
public Task UseTextForParameters(string arg)
{
var settings = new VerifySettings();
settings.UseTextForParameters(arg);
return Verify(arg + "UseTextForParameters", settings);
}
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
[Arguments("Value2")]
public Task UseTextForParametersFluent(string arg) =>
Verify(arg + "UseTextForParametersFluent")
.UseTextForParameters(arg);
By default, Verify expects every parameterized case to have a unique file name with the parameters appended to the file name. This behavior can be overridden by using IgnoreParametersForVerified()
. In this case, the verified file name does not contain the parameter values, meaning it is the same for each testcase.
IgnoreParametersForVerified
accepts an array for passing through the parameters. These values are passed to UseParameters. This is required for MSTest, and xUnit. Parameters should not be passed for NUnit, TUnit and Fixie since they are automatically detected.
The below samples produce:
For the instance case:
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerified_arg=One.received.txt
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerified_arg=Two.received.txt
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerified.verified.txt
For the fluent case:
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerifiedFluent_arg=One.received.txt
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerifiedFluent_arg=Two.received.txt
- NamerTests.IgnoreParametersForVerifiedFluent.verified.txt
[Test]
[Arguments("One")]
[Arguments("Two")]
public Task IgnoreParametersForVerified(string arg)
{
var settings = new VerifySettings();
settings.IgnoreParametersForVerified();
return Verify("value", settings);
}
[Test]
[Arguments("One")]
[Arguments("Two")]
public Task IgnoreParametersForVerifiedFluent(string arg) =>
Verify("value")
.IgnoreParametersForVerified();
The parameters passed to IgnoreParametersForVerified can be used pass custom parameters to UseParameters.
[Test]
[Arguments("One")]
[Arguments("Two")]
public Task IgnoreParametersForVerifiedCustomParams(string arg)
{
var settings = new VerifySettings();
settings.IgnoreParametersForVerified($"Number{arg}");
return Verify("value", settings);
}
[Test]
[Arguments("One")]
[Arguments("Two")]
public Task IgnoreParametersForVerifiedCustomParamsFluent(string arg) =>
Verify("value")
.IgnoreParametersForVerified($"Number{arg}");
Parameters can be hashed as an alternative to being stringified. This is useful when the parameters are large and could potentially generate file names that exceed allowances of the OS.
Hashing parameter is achieved by using HashParameters
.
Overriding text used for parameters is respected when generating the hash.
XxHash64 is used to perform the hash.
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
[Arguments("Value2")]
public Task HashParameters(string arg)
{
var settings = new VerifySettings();
settings.HashParameters();
return Verify(arg, settings);
}
[Test]
[Arguments("Value1")]
[Arguments("Value2")]
public Task HashParametersFluent(string arg) =>
Verify(arg)
.HashParameters();