Bogus
NSubstitute
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Bogus | NSubstitute | |
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27 | 11 | |
8,261 | 2,545 | |
- | 1.3% | |
8.3 | 7.4 | |
2 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
C# | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Bogus
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Bogus custom Dataset
Bogus NuGet package is fake data generator which can be helpful for populating tables in a database and testing purposes. If a database is not used and Bogus populates list of data each time an application runs, the data is random, never the same. Also, the random data generated by Bogus may not meet a developer’s requirements.
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C# User-defined explicit and implicit conversion operators
A list is populated with NuGet package Bogus.
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Windows form move items up/down in ListView and more
Other project either mocked data using NuGet package Bogus or a json file.
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Should I give a copy of the database to the developer
That reminds me of Bogus which also generates dummy data that I've been using for sometime now.
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Best practices for organising Mock Data & Repositories in Testing
To do all this you need test though...and that's where ]Bogus](https://github.com/bchavez/Bogus) and Auto Bogus come in handy. They both generate semi random test data that you can use to populate whatever method you've decided to use. You can setup rules so for specific fields, they have built in generators for common things like names and addresses. Auto Bogus can be used to populate large/complicated objects with data automatically (it can be slow if you don't use .WithRecursiveDepth() or.WithTreeDepth() )
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Do you guys mock everything in your Unit Tests?
Bogus - For creating fake data Verify - Snapshot testing for .NET MELT - For testing ILogger usage Stryker - Mutation Testing for .NET TestContainers - run docker programmatically in integration tests
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WinForms communicate between forms
To keep things interesting Bogus library is used to create a Person instance.
- bchavez/Bogus: fake data generator for C#
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The art of Deconstructing
Usage with mocked data using Bogus NuGet package.
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Nuget Packages in Class Libraries
I would say the issue is either a general issue with how Revit loads the addin, or maybe an issue with conflicts in your transitive dependencies. You can do some tests to try to figure out which. Try making a barebones Revit addin that uses a library that has no dependencies and isn't likely to be used in Revit. I'd suggest Bogus, you can use it generate a few pieces of test data and log them/display in the UI/whatever. If that works, then it would appear that Revit is fine with your addin having dependencies (which I would expect).
NSubstitute
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What am I missing about interfaces?
a. you might do so purely out of argo cult, i.e. because someone told you this was the right thing to do™, and that's a silly exercise. b. you could also be doing this for a good reason: to use the interface with a mocking tool like NSubstitute
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The Moq-gate: You Either Die a Hero...
When comparing it to one of its most well-known alternatives, NSubstitute, which has "only" reached 85.6 million downloads, it is fair to say that Moq is the most widely used mocking library in the .NET ecosystem.
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Since v4.20, Moq is harvesting email addresses
Maintainer rejected the PR. They have temporarily disabled the integration in https://github.com/moq/moq/pull/1375 but kept the SponsorLink project reference in the source code. It seems like their intent is to re-enable the integration at a later point :(
NSubstitute [0] might be an alternative. Or to fork Moq pre-4.20.
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Setting up a simple testing project with C#
In terms of mocking there are several frameworks you can use, but I've mainly relied on Moq and NSubstitute. Within this demo, I'm going to use NSubstitute as I've found it a little easier to use.
- [AskJS] Can we talk about Stubs, Spies and Mocks in JavaScript and what a mess they are?
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Coincidence? I think not
it will change the URL from https://github.com/nsubstitute/NSubstitute to https://github.dev/nsubstitute/NSubstitute (or you can just nav there yourself).
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I need a C# crash course for experienced developers
NSubstitute
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Moq vs NSubstitute: syntax cheat sheet
🔗 NSubstitute documentation | NSubstitute
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My Top N Favorite Plugins and Tools for Developers
If you use NSubstitute (the best mocking .NET framework), then you have to install this small yet useful plugin right now. It kindly generates mocks and Arg.Is / Arg.Any.
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Dot net libraries/tools that are usefull in many projects
Another nice mocking framework is NSubstitute https://nsubstitute.github.io/
What are some alternatives?
AutoFixture - AutoFixture is an open source library for .NET designed to minimize the 'Arrange' phase of your unit tests in order to maximize maintainability. Its primary goal is to allow developers to focus on what is being tested rather than how to setup the test scenario, by making it easier to create object graphs containing test data.
Moq - Repo for managing Moq 4.x [Moved to: https://github.com/moq/moq]
faker-cs - C# port of the Ruby Faker gem (http://faker.rubyforge.org/)
FakeItEasy - The easy mocking library for .NET
NBuilder - Rapid generation of test objects in .NET
NUnit - NUnit Framework
Rhino Mocks
GenFu - GenFu is a library you can use to generate realistic test data. It is composed of several property fillers that can populate commonly named properties through reflection using an internal database of values or randomly created data. You can override any of the fillers, give GenFu hints on how to fill them.
Fluent Assertions - A very extensive set of extension methods that allow you to more naturally specify the expected outcome of a TDD or BDD-style unit tests. Targets .NET Framework 4.7, as well as .NET Core 2.1, .NET Core 3.0, .NET 6, .NET Standard 2.0 and 2.1. Supports the unit test frameworks MSTest2, NUnit3, XUnit2, MSpec, and NSpec3.