protected virtual void MultipleItemSetterVerifyDictionary(TestObjectWithDictionary gil) { gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("best known for", "being awesome"); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("skill level", 1000); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().ContainKey("updated at"); gil.FreeformProperties ["updated at"].Should().BeOfType <DateTimeOffset>(); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().HaveCount(5); }
protected virtual void MultipleItemSetterVerifyDictionary(TestObjectWithDictionary gil) { gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("best known for", "being awesome"); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("skill level", 1000); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().ContainKey("updated at"); gil.FreeformProperties ["updated at"].Should().BeOfType<DateTimeOffset>(); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().HaveCount(5); }
protected override void MultipleItemSetterVerifyDictionary(TestObjectWithDictionary gil) { // FIXME: varies from the base class by: // - skill level being a double type, rather than an int // - updated at being a JObject, rather than a DateTimeOffset // These are not the types I'd expect for these values, but, the RethinkDB datum converters are only plugged into the // top level of the object with the newtonsoft converter, not the values inside a dictionary. This is debatably wrong, // but, I'm not fixing it right now... the best solution might be to incorporate any technical requirements of the // newtonsoft extension library into the core, and drop this extension library... gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("best known for", "being awesome"); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().Contain("skill level", 1000.0); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().ContainKey("updated at"); gil.FreeformProperties ["updated at"].Should().BeOfType<JObject>(); gil.FreeformProperties.Should().HaveCount(5); }