Assert.AreEqual Method (String, String, Boolean, String, array<Object )
Verifies that two specified strings are equal, ignoring case or not as specified. The assertion fails if they are not equal. Displays a message if the assertion fails, and applies the specified formatting to it.
Namespace: Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting
Assembly: Microsoft.VisualStudio.QualityTools.UnitTestFramework (in Microsoft.VisualStudio.QualityTools.UnitTestFramework.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Shared Sub AreEqual ( _
expected As String, _
actual As String, _
ignoreCase As Boolean, _
message As String, _
ParamArray parameters As Object() _
)
public static void AreEqual(
string expected,
string actual,
bool ignoreCase,
string message,
params Object[] parameters
)
public:
static void AreEqual(
String^ expected,
String^ actual,
bool ignoreCase,
String^ message,
... array<Object^>^ parameters
)
static member AreEqual :
expected:string *
actual:string *
ignoreCase:bool *
message:string *
parameters:Object[] -> unit
public static function AreEqual(
expected : String,
actual : String,
ignoreCase : boolean,
message : String,
... parameters : Object[]
)
Parameters
- expected
Type: System.String
The first string to compare. This is the string the unit test expects.
- actual
Type: System.String
The second string to compare. This is the string the unit test produced.
- ignoreCase
Type: System.Boolean
A Boolean value that indicates a case-sensitive or insensitive comparison. true indicates a case-insensitive comparison.
- message
Type: System.String
A message to display if the assertion fails. This message can be seen in the unit test results.
- parameters
Type: array<System.Object[]
An array of parameters to use when formatting message.
Exceptions
Exception | Condition |
---|---|
AssertFailedException | expected is not equal to actual. |
Remarks
The invariant culture is used for the comparison.
.NET Framework Security
- Full trust for the immediate caller. This member cannot be used by partially trusted code. For more information, see Using Libraries from Partially Trusted Code.
See Also
Reference
Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting Namespace