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Home/ Questions/Q 8287641
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T12:06:24+00:00 2026-06-08T12:06:24+00:00

I have a class public interface IMyInterface { string MethodA(); void MethodB(); } public

  • 0

I have a class

public interface IMyInterface 
{
    string MethodA();
    void MethodB();
}

public class MyClass : IMyInterface
{
    public string MethodA()
    {
        // Do something important
    }

    public void MethodB()
    {
        string value = MethodA();
        // Do something important
    }
}

I want to unit test MethodB, but I’m having trouble thinking about how I can Mock MethodA while still calling into MethodB using Moq. Moq mocks the interface, not the class, so I can’t just call mock.Object.MethodB(), right?

Is this possible? If so, how?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T12:06:26+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 12:06 pm

    I don’t think it is possible. Even it is possible I’d prefer not to do that.

    You are testing behavior of MyClass, the fact that it happen to implement IMyInterface
    is somewhat unrelated to testing behavior of MethodA and MethodB. You can have separate test that makes sure that class implements interfaces that you expect it to implement if necessary. Testing of MyClass.MethodB should be done on instance of MyClass, not on semi-mocked object.

    If you think that behavior of MethodA is dependency you may try actually extract it explicitly from the class. It will allow to test both MethodA (which will simply delegate to the dependency) and MethodB (which will use the dependency and do more).

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