csharp-nunit

'Get best practices for NUnit unit testing, including data-driven tests'

Skill file

Preview skill file
---
name: csharp-nunit
description: 'Get best practices for NUnit unit testing, including data-driven tests'
---

# 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

Source

Creator's repository · github/awesome-copilot

View on GitHub

Security

Security checks in progress
Results will appear here once audits complete
What this skill can do
Reads your filesConnects to the internetRuns code on your machine
Checked by 3 independent security firms
Does it try to trick the AI?Not yet checkedPending · Gen Agent Trust Hub
Does it sneak in hidden code?Not yet checkedPending · Socket
Does it have known bugs?Not yet checkedPending · Snyk