AreEqual() public method

Verifies that two specified objects are equal. The assertion fails if the objects are not equal.
expected and actual must be the same type.
public AreEqual ( object expected, object actual, string message = null ) : void
expected object The expected value.
actual object The actual value.
message string An optional message to display if the assertion fails.
return void
Example #1
0
        public void DifferentTypesEqualityIsNotConclusive()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(42, "42");

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Inconclusive, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }
Example #2
0
        public void NullIsNotComparableWithValues()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(42, null);

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Inconclusive, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }
Example #3
0
        public void NullAndEmptyStringAreEqual()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(null, string.Empty);

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Succeeded, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }
Example #4
0
        public void NullValuesAreEqual()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(null, null);

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Succeeded, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }
Example #5
0
        public void AreEqualShouldFailWithDifferentValues()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(1, 2);

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Failed, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }
Example #6
0
        public void AreEqualShouldSucceedWithSameValues()
        {
            var assert = new AssertClass();
            assert.AreEqual(1, 1);

            Assert.AreEqual(TestOutcome.Succeeded, _args.Result.Outcome);
        }