Class Under Test

Normally, I'd write the tests first. TC-Lite is very suitable for doing Test-Driven Development. However, on this page, we just want to to illustrate the mechanics of writing tests, so we'll start by building the class to be tested.

In the FibLib directory create a file named Fibonacci.cs with the following content:

namespace FibLib
{
    public class Fibonacci
    {
        public int Number(int n)
        {  
            return n == 0 ? 0
                 : n == 1 ? 1
                 : Number(n-2) + Number(n-1);
        }
    }
}

This class implements a method to return elements of a Fibonacci sequence. It uses recursion and is not very efficient, but will serve as a basis for writing some tests.

The observant reader may notice that both the class and the method could have been static. Although that would work quite well it wouldn't allow me to show you something that I want to demonstrate later.

First Tests

Create a file FibonacciTests.cs in the FibTests directory, with the following content:

using TCLite;
using FibLib

namespace FibTests
{
    public class FibonacciTests
    {
        readonly Fibonacci fib = new Fibonacci();

        [TestCase]
        public void ElementZeroIsZero()
        {
            Assert.That(fib.Number(0), Is.EqualTo(0));
        }

        [TestCase]
        public void ElementOneIsOne()
        {
            Assert.That(fib.Number(1), Is.EqualTo(1));
        }

        [TestCase]
        public void ElementEightIsTwentyOne()
        {
            Assert.That(fib.Number(8), Is.EqualTo(21));
        }
    }
}

Notice the initialization of the field fib as part of the construction of an instance of Fibonacci. TC-Lite constructs a new instance of the class for use by each test case. That instance is generally known as a "Test Fixture" in the lingo of unit testing. The "fixture" is basically the set of data operated on by the tests.

If you came to TC-Lite from NUnit you may think of the fixture as being shared across all the tests. In TC-Lite that's not so. Each test case gets a completely new fixture. This makes inline initialization of each field an elegant and simple replacement for SetUp methods.

Note too that I made the field readonly, because I don't want to change it. Of course, in such simple tests, it's obvious that I am not changing it but using readonly is a good practice if you have no intention of changing a field.

Our tests are rather verbose, but we'll fix that later. For now, run them...

dotnet run -p FibTests

The output shows that our three tests passed:

Test Run Summary
  Overall result: Passed
  Test Count: 3, Passed: 3, Failed: 0, Warnings: 0, Inconclusive: 0
    Duration: 0.000 seconds

Parameterized Tests

Our three test methods basically do the same thing but use different values. We can simplify the test code by use of a single method that takes arguments.

Modify FibonacciTests.cs to contain just one method:

using TCLite;
using FibLib

namespace FibTests
{
    public class FibonacciTests
    {
        readonly Fibonacci fib = new Fibonacci();

        [TestCase(0, 0)]
        [TestCase(1, 1)]
        [TestCase(8, 21)]
        public void ElementsAreCorrect(int index, int value)
        {
            Assert.That(fib.Number(index), Is.EqualTo(value));
        }
    }
}

Since three sets of arguments are provided, three test cases are executed and the output remains the same.

At this point, it's trivial to add more test values. The Fibonacci sequence is endless, but we'll have to be satisfied with a finite number of cases. Go ahead and try this yourself. Use some of the first few elements of the sequence...

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 56, 90, 146, 236, 382, 618...