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How to use Exclude in FluentAssertions for property in collection?

I have two classes:

public class ClassA
{
  public int? ID {get; set;}
  public IEnumerable<ClassB> Children {get; set;}
}

public class ClassB
{
  public int? ID {get; set;}
  public string Name {get; set;}
}

I want to use fluent assertions to compare to ClassA instances. However I want to ignore the IDs (because the IDs will have been assigned after the save).

I know I can do this:

expectedA.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(actualA, options => options.Excluding(x => x.PropertyPath == "Children[0].ID"));

Which I can obviously repeat for each ClassB in the collection. However I'm looking for a way to exclude the all the IDs (rather than doing an exclude for each element).

I've read this question however if I remove the [0] indexers the assertions fail.

Is this possible?

like image 914
Liath Avatar asked Mar 03 '14 09:03

Liath


3 Answers

What about?

expected.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(actualA, options => options.Excluding(su => 
   (su.RuntimeType == typeof(ClassB)) && (su.PropertyPath.EndsWith("Id")));`

Or you could do a RegEx match on the property path, such as

expected.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(actualA, options => options.Excluding(su => (Regex.IsMatch
   ("Children\[.+\]\.ID"));

I actually like that last one, but the regex stuff makes it a bit difficult to read. Maybe I should extend ISubjectInfo with a method to match the path against a wildcard pattern, so that you can do this:

expected.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(actualA, options => options
  .Excluding(su => su.PathMatches("Children[*].ID")));
like image 166
Dennis Doomen Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 02:11

Dennis Doomen


I've just come across a similar problem and the latest version of FluentAssertions has changed things a bit.

My objects contains dictionaries of other objects. The objects in the dictionaries contain other objects that I want to exclude. The scenario I have is around testing Json serialization where I ignore certain properties.

This works for me:

gotA.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(expectedB , config => 
  config
    .Excluding(ctx => ctx.SelectedMemberInfo.MemberType == typeof(Venue))
    .Excluding(ctx => ctx.SelectedMemberInfo.MemberType == typeof(Exhibit))
    .Excluding(ctx => ctx.SelectedMemberInfo.MemberType == typeof(Content))
    .Excluding(ctx => ctx.SelectedMemberInfo.MemberType == typeof(Survey))
    .Excluding(ctx => ctx.SelectedMemberInfo.MemberType == typeof(Media))
  );

Took some time to work out how to do it, but it's really useful!

like image 22
Nick Randell Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 04:11

Nick Randell


Simple way would be to set assertions on collection directly, combined with its exclusion on ClassA equivalency assertion:

expectedA.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(expectedB,
   o => o.Excluding(s => s.PropertyInfo.Name == "Children"));
expectedA.Children.ShouldBeEquivalentTo(expectedB.Children,
   o => o.Excluding(s => s.PropertyInfo.Name = "Id"));
like image 14
k.m Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 04:11

k.m