a singleton class, aka a class with a private constructor and only one static property that exposes only one instance, is retained for the entirety of your application's runtime
Static constructors are guaranteed to be run only once per application domain, before any instances of a class are created or any static members are accessed. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/programming-guide/classes-and-structs/static-constructors
The implementation shown is thre...
ah, it is thread safe
I suppose it would have to be, otherwise the lock object would also not really work
> how to do this in C# well, it doesnt work in Javascript, and we all know that if you write front end in C#, you most likely also do Javascript as well
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I have an event handler in my TestCode. I need to check something and need to do assert. I am using Assert.Fail, but this Assert.Fail method is throwing an exception which is propogating to the caller.
But my goal is to fail my test.
do I have any other options to fail my test?
and it does not fail my test since the exception is propogating to the actual caller code.
there I am just logging and doing nothing in the caller catch block.
LicenseManagerService.Verify(m => m.LoadProductLicenses(),Times.Once);
By calling the LicenseManagerService property, you're creating a new mock object. Naturally, no invocations have ever been performed on this instance.
You should change this property's implementation to return the same inst...
iirc, it was called a "spy" but I havent touched unit testing domain in quite a while
in simple terms, you basically test this
var numberOfTimesCalled = 0;
event.Register(() => numberOfTimesCalled++);
event.Execute();
Assert.Equal(0, numberOfTimesCalled);
No, it does not work in my case. My code/utility is based on N-unit framework which actually does some impl. on the actual code and then have assertion statements.
So just checking if a method is called does not solve the problem.