I try to unit-test a trait with two methods. I want to assert the result of foo which calls another method inside the trait:
<?php
trait Foo {
public function foo() {
return $this->anotherFoo();
}
public function anotherFoo() {
return 'my value';
}
}
/** @var MockInterface|Foo */
$mock = Mockery::mock(Foo::class);
$mock
->makePartial()
->shouldReceive('anotherFoo')
->once()
->andReturns('another value');
$this->assertEquals('another value', $mock->foo());
I get the following result when I run phpunit:
There was 1 failure:
1) XXX::testFoo
Failed asserting that two strings are equal.
--- Expected
+++ Actual
@@ @@
-'another value'
+'my value'
Is this generally possible like this?
I don't think you can directly mock a trait like that. What does seem to work is to do the same thing but using a class that uses the trait. So, for example, create a test Bar class that uses Foo and then make a partial mock of that. That way you're working with a real class and Mockery seems happy to override the trait method.
trait Foo {
public function foo() {
return $this->anotherFoo();
}
public function anotherFoo() {
return 'my value';
}
}
class Bar {
use Foo;
}
/** @var MockInterface|Bar */
$mock = Mockery::mock(Bar::class);
$mock
->makePartial()
->shouldReceive('anotherFoo')
->once()
->andReturns('another value');
$this->assertEquals('another value', $mock->foo());
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